| D. Graur, W.A. Hide, and W.-H. Li. Is the guinea-pig a rodent? Nature, 351:649--652, 1991. |
....first factor separates mammals from other phylums. The second factor separates primates from ovins and rodents, and fishes from birds and Xenopus. An interesting result is that the guinea pig is clearly separated from the other rodents, which is a confirmation of the observations of Graur et al. [29]. Glo bally, the factorial map obtained is coherent with the Hovergen tree. In fact, all the major trends of the phylogeny are visible on the map built with the two first factors. Less visible are the relationships between the closely related sequences as they are often hidden in the minor axes ....
Graur D, Hide WA, Li WH (1991) Is the guinea-pig a rodent? Nature
....edge. The Q relation takes no decision concerning the position of the rodent and the rabbit, in relation to the other mammals. To date, there is no consensus on the position of the rodent and the recent polemic concerns the possibility of the rodent being at the root of the mammalian evolution [21, 29]. Running times of the method are reasonable. For example, a non optimized version of IQ required 0:03 seconds (including the time consuming I O operations) to compute the above tree on 11 species (330 r4 trees processed) on a SUN SPARC 5. In contrast, inference of the r4 trees, including ....
D. Graur, W.A. Hide, and W.-H. Li. Is the guinea-pig a rodent? Nature, 351:649--652, 1991.
No context found.
Evol., 7:195-200. Graur, D., Hide, W. A., and Li, W.-H. (1991). Is the guinea pig a rodent? Nature, 351:649-652.
No context found.
D. Graur, W.A. Hide, and W.-H. Li. Is the guinea-pig a rodent? Nature, 351:649--652, 1991.
No context found.
D. Graur, W.A. Hide, W.-H. Li, Is the guinea-pig a rodent?, Nature 351 (1991) 649 -- 652.
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