Phylogenetic networks capture reticulate evolution, but existing methods have mostly been restricted to level-1 topologies. This restriction severely limits the biological applicability of phylogenetic network inference. Here, we extend the widely used SNaQ method to scalably infer arbitrary binary, metric, semi-directed phylogenetic networks while allowing optional restriction to a user-specified network space. We implement computational improvements that yield substantial speedups in composite-likelihood evaluation, opening the door to genome-scale studies of hybridization, introgression, and horizontal gene transfer under a composite likelihood framework for the first time. Guided by recent identifiability results, we restrict SNaQ’s search space to tree-child and galled networks (TCG) and assess SNaQ’s ability to accurately infer networks that fall both inside and outside of this space. In these simulations, SNaQ reliably recovers TCG networks under diverse conditions, and still recovers meaningful information about hybridizations even when the phylogeny is not correctly inferred. Finally, we analyze the phylogeny of textitXiphophorus (Poeciliidae) and recover network models that fit the data significantly better than previously inferred level-1 networks, revealing a history with more hybridization events than previously depicted by level-1 networks. By enabling scalable inference beyond level-1 networks, our work facilitates the reconstruction of far richer reticulate histories from genomic data, bringing phylogenetic analysis closer to capturing the full network of life.
Behavior change beyond intervention: an activity-theoretical perspective on human-centered design of personal health technology
IntroductionModern personal technologies, such as smartphone apps with artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities, have a significant potential for helping people make necessary changes in their behavior

