taximetrics

taximetrics
tax·i·met·rics (tăk'sə-mĕtʹrĭks) n. (used with a sing. verb)

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▪ biological classification
also called  Numerical Taxonomy,  
      the multivariate analysis of many measurable features (taxonomic characters) to produce a biological classification. Because of the complexity of the analysis—many characters are measured on many individuals or a number of species—the use of a computer is virtually mandatory. No attempt is made, as in evolutionary taxonomy, to weight characters on the basis of their presumed roles in natural selection. For this reason, numerical taxonomy produces a classification that reflects “phenetic distances,” i.e., degrees of similarity. Such classifications are rejected by many conventional taxonomists who feel that the relationships expressed in a classification should be strictly evolutionary. See also taxonomy.

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Universalium. 2010.

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