no code implementations • 22 Jul 2023 • Steven Kelk, Ruben Meuwese
One way of understanding how topologically different two phylogenetic trees are, is to construct a minimum-size agreement forest: a partition of $X$ into the smallest number of blocks, such that the blocks induce homeomorphic, non-overlapping subtrees in both trees.
no code implementations • 31 May 2019 • Cameron Browne, Dennis J. N. J. Soemers, Éric Piette, Matthew Stephenson, Michael Conrad, Walter Crist, Thierry Depaulis, Eddie Duggan, Fred Horn, Steven Kelk, Simon M. Lucas, João Pedro Neto, David Parlett, Abdallah Saffidine, Ulrich Schädler, Jorge Nuno Silva, Alex de Voogt, Mark H. M. Winands
Digital Archaeoludology (DAL) is a new field of study involving the analysis and reconstruction of ancient games from incomplete descriptions and archaeological evidence using modern computational techniques.
no code implementations • 26 Jan 2019 • Ricards Marcinkevics, Steven Kelk, Carlo Galuzzi, Berthold Stegemann
Informally, such a subsequence is expected to be relevant for the classification and can be helpful for practitioners in interpreting the outcome.