Genome-Wide Association Studies are powerful tools to detect genetic variants associated with diseases. Their results have, however, been questioned, in part because of the bias induced by population stratification. This is a consequence of systematic differences in allele frequencies due to the difference in sample ancestries that can lead to both false positive or false negative findings. Many strategies are available to account for stratification but their performances differ, for instance according to the type of population structure, the disease susceptibility locus minor allele frequency, the degree of sampling imbalanced, or the sample size. We focus on the type of population structure and propose a comparison of the most commonly us...
Population stratification can be a serious obstacle in the analysis of genomewide association studie...
Case-control studies of genetic factors are prone to a special form of confounding called population...
© 2007 by World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. Although genetic associatio...
Genome-Wide Association Studies are powerful tools to detect genetic variants associated with diseas...
Genome-Wide Association Studies are powerful tools to detect genetic variants associated with diseas...
International audienceGenome-Wide Association Studies are powerful tools to detect genetic variants ...
Population stratification can cause spurious associations in population-based association studies. S...
Over the past years, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have generated a wealth of new informati...
Genomewide association studies have become the primary tool for discovering the genetic basis of com...
In population-based case-control association studies, the regular ?2 test is often used to investiga...
To avoid inflated type I error and reduced power in genetic association studies, it is necessary to ...
Meta-analyses of genome-wide association studies require numerous study partners to conduct pre-defi...
In genome-wide association studies, population stratification is recognized as producing inflated ty...
<b><i>Aims:</i></b> The study of rare variants, which can potentially explain a great proportion of ...
In population based genetic association studies, confounding due to population stratification (PS) a...
Population stratification can be a serious obstacle in the analysis of genomewide association studie...
Case-control studies of genetic factors are prone to a special form of confounding called population...
© 2007 by World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. Although genetic associatio...
Genome-Wide Association Studies are powerful tools to detect genetic variants associated with diseas...
Genome-Wide Association Studies are powerful tools to detect genetic variants associated with diseas...
International audienceGenome-Wide Association Studies are powerful tools to detect genetic variants ...
Population stratification can cause spurious associations in population-based association studies. S...
Over the past years, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have generated a wealth of new informati...
Genomewide association studies have become the primary tool for discovering the genetic basis of com...
In population-based case-control association studies, the regular ?2 test is often used to investiga...
To avoid inflated type I error and reduced power in genetic association studies, it is necessary to ...
Meta-analyses of genome-wide association studies require numerous study partners to conduct pre-defi...
In genome-wide association studies, population stratification is recognized as producing inflated ty...
<b><i>Aims:</i></b> The study of rare variants, which can potentially explain a great proportion of ...
In population based genetic association studies, confounding due to population stratification (PS) a...
Population stratification can be a serious obstacle in the analysis of genomewide association studie...
Case-control studies of genetic factors are prone to a special form of confounding called population...
© 2007 by World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. Although genetic associatio...