The primary goal of a genomewide scan is to estimate the genomic locations of genes influencing a trait of interest. It is sometimes said that a secondary goal is to estimate the phenotypic effects of each identified locus. Here, it is shown that these two objectives cannot be met reliably by use of a single data set of a currently realistic size. Simulation and analytical results, based on variance-components linkage analysis as an example, demonstrate that estimates of locus-specific effect size at genomewide LOD score peaks tend to be grossly inflated and can even be virtually independent of the true effect size, even for studies on large samples when the true effect size is small. However, the bias diminishes asymptotically. The explana...
International audienceIn recent years, a number of large-scale genome-wide association studies have ...
When performing a genome scan in linkage or linkage disequilibrium studies to detect loci underlying...
Complex diseases are often highly heritable. However, for many complex traits only a small proportio...
The primary goal of a genomewide scan is to estimate the genomic locations of genes influencing a tr...
The evaluation of results from primary genomewide linkage scans of complex human traits remains an a...
The evaluation of results from primary genomewide linkage scans of complex human traits remains an a...
Because of the large number of tests for linkage that are performed in genome scans, the naive estim...
In this work we show that in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) there is a strong bias favoring ...
SummaryOne of the major challenges facing genome-scan studies to discover disease genes is the asses...
Abstract Using the simulated data of Problem 2 for Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 (GAW14...
Abstract Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) test for disease-trait associations an...
Interpretation of dense single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) follow-up of genome-wide association or...
An attractive feature of variance-components methods (including the Haseman-Elston tests) for the de...
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) exploit the correlation in ge- netic diversity along chromoso...
SummaryDisease-susceptibility loci are now being mapped via genomewide scans in which a linkage stat...
International audienceIn recent years, a number of large-scale genome-wide association studies have ...
When performing a genome scan in linkage or linkage disequilibrium studies to detect loci underlying...
Complex diseases are often highly heritable. However, for many complex traits only a small proportio...
The primary goal of a genomewide scan is to estimate the genomic locations of genes influencing a tr...
The evaluation of results from primary genomewide linkage scans of complex human traits remains an a...
The evaluation of results from primary genomewide linkage scans of complex human traits remains an a...
Because of the large number of tests for linkage that are performed in genome scans, the naive estim...
In this work we show that in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) there is a strong bias favoring ...
SummaryOne of the major challenges facing genome-scan studies to discover disease genes is the asses...
Abstract Using the simulated data of Problem 2 for Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 (GAW14...
Abstract Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) test for disease-trait associations an...
Interpretation of dense single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) follow-up of genome-wide association or...
An attractive feature of variance-components methods (including the Haseman-Elston tests) for the de...
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) exploit the correlation in ge- netic diversity along chromoso...
SummaryDisease-susceptibility loci are now being mapped via genomewide scans in which a linkage stat...
International audienceIn recent years, a number of large-scale genome-wide association studies have ...
When performing a genome scan in linkage or linkage disequilibrium studies to detect loci underlying...
Complex diseases are often highly heritable. However, for many complex traits only a small proportio...