Sewall Wright’s population structure statistic, FST, measured among samples of world populations is often 15% or less. This would indicate that 85% of genetic variation occurs within groups while only 15% can be attributed to allele frequency differences among groups. In this paper, we show that this low value reflects strong biases that result from violating hidden assumptions that define FST. These limitations on FST are demonstrated algebraically and in the context of analyzing dinucleotide repeat allele frequencies for a set of eight loci genotyped in eight human groups and in chimpanzees. In our analyses, estimates of FST fail to identify important variation. For example, when the analysis includes only humans, FST = 0.119, but adding ...
Special Committee Chair: Carlos D. Bustamante Special Committee Members: Andrew G. Clark, Richard ...
A major question in evolutionary biology is how natural selection has shaped patterns of genetic var...
f-statistics have emerged as a first line of analysis for making inferences about demographic histor...
Sewall Wright’s population structure statistic, FST , measured among samples of world populations is...
Understanding how and why humans are biologically different is indispensable to get oriented in the ...
The massive efforts to study in detail the human genome have produced extraordinary amounts of genet...
Our understanding of the distribution of worldwide human genomic diversity has greatly increased ove...
Interest in genetic diversity within and between human populations as a way to answer questions abou...
It is often taken for granted that the human species is divided in rather homogeneous groups or race...
Rosenberg et al. (1) described the genetic structure of 52 human populations from five continents st...
Despite our relatively large population size, humans are genetically less variable than other primat...
Several recent studies have argued that human genetic variation conforms to a model of isolation by ...
AbstractUnderstanding the forces that govern the distribution of single nucleotide polymorphisms is ...
The proportion of human genetic variation due to differences between populations is modest, and indi...
We have investigated the pattern and extent of nucleotide diversity in 10 X-chromosomal genes where ...
Special Committee Chair: Carlos D. Bustamante Special Committee Members: Andrew G. Clark, Richard ...
A major question in evolutionary biology is how natural selection has shaped patterns of genetic var...
f-statistics have emerged as a first line of analysis for making inferences about demographic histor...
Sewall Wright’s population structure statistic, FST , measured among samples of world populations is...
Understanding how and why humans are biologically different is indispensable to get oriented in the ...
The massive efforts to study in detail the human genome have produced extraordinary amounts of genet...
Our understanding of the distribution of worldwide human genomic diversity has greatly increased ove...
Interest in genetic diversity within and between human populations as a way to answer questions abou...
It is often taken for granted that the human species is divided in rather homogeneous groups or race...
Rosenberg et al. (1) described the genetic structure of 52 human populations from five continents st...
Despite our relatively large population size, humans are genetically less variable than other primat...
Several recent studies have argued that human genetic variation conforms to a model of isolation by ...
AbstractUnderstanding the forces that govern the distribution of single nucleotide polymorphisms is ...
The proportion of human genetic variation due to differences between populations is modest, and indi...
We have investigated the pattern and extent of nucleotide diversity in 10 X-chromosomal genes where ...
Special Committee Chair: Carlos D. Bustamante Special Committee Members: Andrew G. Clark, Richard ...
A major question in evolutionary biology is how natural selection has shaped patterns of genetic var...
f-statistics have emerged as a first line of analysis for making inferences about demographic histor...