The general coalescent with asynchronous mergers of ancestral lines | Journal of Applied Probability | Cambridge Core (original) (raw)
Abstract
Take a sample of individuals in the fixed-size population model with exchangeable family sizes. Follow the ancestral lines for the sampled individuals backwards in time to observe the ancestral process. We describe a class of asymptotic structures for the ancestral process via a convergence criterion. One of the basic conditions of the criterion prevents simultaneous mergers of ancestral lines. Another key condition implies that the marginal distribution of the family size is attracted by an infinitely divisible distribution. If the latter is normal the coalescent allows only for pairwise mergers (Kingman's coalescent). Otherwise multiple mergers happen with positive probability.
Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Applied Probability Trust 1999
References
Feller, W. (1966). An Introduction to Probability Theory and its Applications, Vol 2. John Wiley, New York.Google Scholar
Fleischmann, K., and Siegmund-Shultze, R. (1977). The structure of reduced Galton–Watson processes. Math. Nachr. 79, 233–241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kingman, J. F. C. (1982a). On the genealogy of large populations. In Essays in Statistical Science, eds. Gani, J. and Hannan, E. J. (J. Appl. Prob. 19A), Applied Probability Trust, Sheffield, pp. 27–43.Google Scholar
Kingman, J. F. C. (1982b). Exchangeability and the evolution of large populations. In Exchangeability in Probability and Statistics, eds. Koch, G. and Spizzichino, F., North-Holland, Amsterdam, pp. 97–112.Google Scholar
Slack, R. S. (1968). A branching process with mean one and possibly infinite variance. Z. Wahrscheinlichkeitsth. 9, 139–145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zolotarev, V. M. (1957). More exact statements of several theorems in the theory of branching processes. Teor. Veroyatnost. i Primemen. 2, 256–266. (In Russian.)Google Scholar