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Converting time boundaries into years #56
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Hmm, I'm not sure I understand the contexts of the two quotes above. I can't remember what's exactly in the book, but I guess the way to plot curves and estimate split times goes like this:
That's it, right? So basically, you should never convert a time-segment to a single time, but consider a single time-segment as an interval, which has a start and end point, and ultimately the coalescence rate functions as continuous, but step-wise functions through time. |
Hi @stschiff, |
Those are minor differences. Just look at the scripts and judge whether the calculation makes sense to you. It's just linear interpolations. Not sure what to advice here. |
Hello,
I am using MSMC2 to infer split times between several populations, and when it comes to converting the time boundaries output by MSMC2 into years I see that there are two formulas available:
As far as I understand the difference is that with the second formula the time of a given segment is placed at its middle while with the first one it is placed at the left boundary. However, both result in fairly different estimates in my case and I'm wondering whether I should prefer one or the other.
Thanks in advance,
Loïs
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