TY - JOUR T1 - On the importance of being structured: instantaneous coalescence rates and a re-evaluation of human evolution JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/031062 SP - 031062 AU - Mazet Olivier AU - Rodríguez Willy AU - Grusea Simona AU - Boitard Simon AU - Chikhi Lounès Y1 - 2015/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2015/11/09/031062.abstract N2 - Most species are structured and influenced by processes that either increased or reduced gene flow between populations. However, most population genetic inference methods ignore population structure and reconstruct a history characterized by population size changes under the assumption that species behave as panmictic units. This is potentially problematic since population structure can generate spurious signals of population size change. Moreover, when the model assumed for demographic inference is misspecified, genomic data will likely increase the precision of misleading if not meaningless parameters. In a context of model uncertainty (panmixia versus structure) genomic data may thus not necessarily lead to improved statistical inference.We consider two haploid genomes and develop a theory which explains why any demographic model (with or without population size changes) will necessarily be interpreted as a series of changes in population size by inference methods ignoring structure. We introduce a new parameter, the IICR (inverse instantaneous coalescence rate), and show that it is equivalent to a population size only in panmictic models, and mostly misleading for structured models. We argue that this general issue affects all population genetics methods ignoring population structure. We take the PSMC method as an example and show that it infers population size changes that never took place. We apply our approach to human genomic data and find a reduction in gene flow at the start of the Pleistocene, a major increase throughout the Middle-Pleistocene, and an abrupt disconnection preceding the emergence of modern humans. ER -