Difference between revisions of "Systematics Seminar"

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<span style="color:red">The home page of the Systematics Seminar has moved to [https://uconneeb.github.io/systseminar/ https://uconneeb.github.io/systseminar/]. This EEBedia page is no longer maintained or updated.</span>
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This is the home page of the UConn EEB department's Systematics Seminar (EEB 6486). This is a graduate seminar devoted to issues of interest to graduate students and faculty who make up the systematics program at the University of Connecticut.  
 
This is the home page of the UConn EEB department's Systematics Seminar (EEB 6486). This is a graduate seminar devoted to issues of interest to graduate students and faculty who make up the systematics program at the University of Connecticut.  
  
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We meet on Fridays at 2 PM in the Bamford Room (TLS 171b).
 
We meet on Fridays at 2 PM in the Bamford Room (TLS 171b).
  
== Theme and Schedule for Spring 2019 ==
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== Theme and Schedule for Fall 2019 ==
TBD
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=== Jan. 25 ===
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(no meeting)
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=== Feb. 1 ===
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Kevin and Katie discuss [https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syz002 Priors and Posteriors in Bayesian Timing of Divergence Analyses: the Age of Butterflies Revisited]
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=== Feb. 8 ===
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Katie delves into [https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syz004 OSF-Builder: A new tool for constructing and representing evolutionary histories involving introgression]
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=== Feb. 15 ===
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RADseq: What the heck is it good for anyways?
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*Katie talks mitogenome extraction from RADseq data.<br/>
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*Tanner ponders RADseq for his PhD.<br/>
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*Kevin and Dave entertain Sanger vs. RADseq for a beginning grad student in a far-away land
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[https://dx.doi.org/10.1038%2Fnrg.2015.28 A refresher on RADseq]
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=== Feb. 22  ===
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Tanner discusses [https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syz011 Testing the Role of the Red Queen and Court Jester as Drivers of the Macroevolution of Apollo Butterflies]
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=== Mar. 1 ===
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[https://lukejharmon.github.io/pcm/ We will be reading Luke J. Harmon's book on comparative phylogenetic methods]
  
Kevin discusses [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2019.01.024 Compositional heterogeneity and outgroup choice influence the internal phylogeny of the ants]
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Students registered for the course shall pick one chapter of the book to elaborate on, either by choosing and assigning a paper relevant to the chapter, or by bringing in their own project/data to present.
  
=== Mar. 8 ===
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==August 30==
Alex discusses [https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syz011 A Critical Appraisal of the Placement of Xiphosura (Chelicerata) with Account of Known Sources of Phylogenetic Error]
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Discussion of chapter 1 - A Macroevolutionary Research Program, an organizational meeting
  
We will be meeting in TLS313 so that Janine can regale use with specimens.
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==September 6==
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Discussion of chapter 2 - Fitting Statistical Models to Data, [http://phytools.org/mexico2018/ex/2/Intro-to-phylogenies.html Introduction to phylogenies in R]
  
=== Mar. 15 ===
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==September 13==
Diler discusses [https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08809-7 Hybridization is a recurrent evolutionary stimulus in wild yeast speciation]
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Discussion of chapter 3 - Introduction to Brownian Motion
  
=== Mar. 22 ===
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==September 20==
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Discussion of chapter 4 - Fitting Brownian Motion
  
SPRING BREAK (no meeting)
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==September 27==
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Discussion of chapter 5 - Multivariate Brownian Motion
  
=== Mar. 29 ===
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==October 4==
Katie discusses [https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08621-3 Polygyny is linked to accelerated birdsong evolution but not to larger song repertoires]
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Discussion of chapter 6 - Beyond Brownian Motion<br>[https://github.com/kevinliam/Miscellaneous/blob/master/add_tree_info.zip Kevin shows us how to add images to plotted trees in R]
  
=== Apr. 5  ===
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==October 11==
Mark discusses [https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syy013 Variation Across Mitochondrial Gene Trees Provides Evidence for Systematic Error: How Much Gene Tree Variation Is Biological?]
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Discussion of chapter 7 - Models of discrete character evolution — Lisa Terlova
  
=== Apr. 12 ===
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==October 18==
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Discussion of chapter 8 - Fitting models of discrete character evolution — Lisa Terlova
  
Jack leads the defense of his masters' thesis
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==October 25==
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Discussion of chapter 9 - Beyond the Mk model - Kevin Keegan
  
=== Apr. 19 ===
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==November 1==
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Discussion of chapter 10 - Introduction to birth-death models — Zach Muscavitch
  
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==November 8==
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Discussion of chapter 11 - Fitting birth-death models — Tanner Matson
  
=== Apr. 26 ===
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==November 15==
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Discussion of chapter 12 - Beyond birth-death models - Katie Taylor
  
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==November 22==
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Discussion of chapter 13 - Characters and diversification rates - Amanda Hewes
  
=== May 5 ===
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==December 6==
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Discussion of chapter 14 - Summary
  
 
== Information for discussion leaders ==
 
== Information for discussion leaders ==
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== Past Seminars ==
 
== Past Seminars ==
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* [[Systematics Seminar Spring 2019|Spring 2019]]
 
* [[Systematics Seminar Fall 2018|Fall 2018]]
 
* [[Systematics Seminar Fall 2018|Fall 2018]]
 
* [[Systematics Seminar Spring 2018|Spring 2018]]
 
* [[Systematics Seminar Spring 2018|Spring 2018]]

Latest revision as of 18:03, 26 August 2021

The home page of the Systematics Seminar has moved to https://uconneeb.github.io/systseminar/. This EEBedia page is no longer maintained or updated.

This is the home page of the UConn EEB department's Systematics Seminar (EEB 6486). This is a graduate seminar devoted to issues of interest to graduate students and faculty who make up the systematics program at the University of Connecticut.

Click here for information about joining and using the Systematics email list

Meeting time and place

We meet on Fridays at 2 PM in the Bamford Room (TLS 171b).

Theme and Schedule for Fall 2019

We will be reading Luke J. Harmon's book on comparative phylogenetic methods

Students registered for the course shall pick one chapter of the book to elaborate on, either by choosing and assigning a paper relevant to the chapter, or by bringing in their own project/data to present.

August 30

Discussion of chapter 1 - A Macroevolutionary Research Program, an organizational meeting

September 6

Discussion of chapter 2 - Fitting Statistical Models to Data, Introduction to phylogenies in R

September 13

Discussion of chapter 3 - Introduction to Brownian Motion

September 20

Discussion of chapter 4 - Fitting Brownian Motion

September 27

Discussion of chapter 5 - Multivariate Brownian Motion

October 4

Discussion of chapter 6 - Beyond Brownian Motion
Kevin shows us how to add images to plotted trees in R

October 11

Discussion of chapter 7 - Models of discrete character evolution — Lisa Terlova

October 18

Discussion of chapter 8 - Fitting models of discrete character evolution — Lisa Terlova

October 25

Discussion of chapter 9 - Beyond the Mk model - Kevin Keegan

November 1

Discussion of chapter 10 - Introduction to birth-death models — Zach Muscavitch

November 8

Discussion of chapter 11 - Fitting birth-death models — Tanner Matson

November 15

Discussion of chapter 12 - Beyond birth-death models - Katie Taylor

November 22

Discussion of chapter 13 - Characters and diversification rates - Amanda Hewes

December 6

Discussion of chapter 14 - Summary

Information for discussion leaders

Seminar Format: Registered students be prepared to lead discussions, perhaps more than once depending on the number of participants.

The leader(s) will be responsible both for (1) selection of readings, (2) announcing the selection, (3) an introductory presentation, (4) driving discussion and (5) setting up and putting away the projector.

Readings: In consultation with the instructors, each leader should assign one primary paper for discussion and up to two other ancillary papers or resources. The readings should be posted to EEBedia at least 5 days in advance.

Announcing the reading: The leader should add an entry to the schedule (see below) by editing this page. There are two ways to create a link to the paper:

1. If the paper is available online through our library, it is sufficient to create a link to the DOI:

:[http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syv041 Doyle et al. 2015. Syst. Biol. 64:824-837.]

In this case, you need not give all the citation details because the DOI should always be sufficient to find the paper. The colon (:) at the beginning of the link causes the link to be indented an placed on a separate line. Note that the DOI is in the form of a URL, starting with http://dx.doi.org/. Here is how the above link looks embedded in this EEBedia page:

Doyle et al. 2015. Syst. Biol. 64:824-837.

2. If the paper is not available through the library, upload a PDF of the paper to the UConn dropbox, being sure to use the secure version so that it can be password protected. Copy the URL provided by dropbox, and create a link to it as follows (see the Dropbox Test page for other examples):

:[https://dropbox.uconn.edu/dropbox?n=SystBiol-2015-Doyle-824-37.pdf&p=ELPFIc5NtO3c4V44Ls Doyle et al. 2015.]

In this case, you should provide a full citation to the paper for the benefit of those that visit the site long after the dropbox link has expired; however, the full details need not be part of the link text. Here is what this kind of link looks like embedded in this EEBedia page:

Doyle et al. 2015. Full citation: Vinson P. Doyle, Randee E. Young, Gavin J. P. Naylor, and Jeremy M. Brown. 2015. Can We Identify Genes with Increased Phylogenetic Reliability? Systematic Biology 64 (5): 824-837. doi:10.1093/sysbio/syv041

If you have ancillary papers, upload those to the dropbox individually and create separate links.

Finally, send a note to the Systematics Listserv letting everyone know that a paper is available.

Introductory PowerPoint/KeyNote Presentation: Introduce your topic with a 10- to 15-minute PowerPoint or KeyNote presentation. Dedicate at least 2/3 of that time to placing the subject into the broader context of the subject areas/themes and at most 1/3 of it introducing paper, special definitions, taxa, methods, etc. Never exceed 15 minutes. (For example, for a reading on figs and fig-wasps, broaden the scope to plant-herbivore co-evolution.). Add images, include short movie clips, visit web resources, etc. to keep the presentation engaging. Although your presentation should not be a review of the primary reading, showing key figures from the readings may be helpful (and appreciated). You may also want to provide more detail and background about ancillary readings which likely have not been read by all.

Discussion: You are responsible for driving the discussion. Assume everyone in attendance has read the main paper. There are excellent suggestions for generating class discussions on Chris Elphick’s Current Topics in Conservation Biology course site. See section under expectations.

Prepare 3-5 questions that you expect will spur discussion. Ideally, you would distribute questions a day or two before our class meeting.

Projector: The Bamford room has joined the modern world--you should just need to plug in your computer or USB key to project.

Past Seminars