It is well known that genotyping errors lead to loss of power in gene-mapping studies and underestimation of the strength of correlations between trait- and marker-locus genotypes. In two-point linkage analysis, these errors can be absorbed in an inflated recombination-fraction estimate, leaving the test statistic quite robust. In multipoint analysis, however, genotyping errors can easily result in false exclusion of the true location of a disease-predisposing gene. In a companion article, we described a “complex-valued” extension of the recombination fraction to accommodate errors in the assignment of trait-locus genotypes, leading to a multipoint LOD score with the same robustness to errors in trait-locus genotypes that is seen with the c...
SummaryTo refine the location of a disease gene within the bounds provided by linkage analysis, many...
SummaryBecause of their great abundance and amenability to fully automated genotyping, single-nucleo...
We present the results of a simulation study that indicate that true haplotypes at multiple, tightly...
In linkage and linkage disequilibrium (LD) analysis of complex multifactorial phenotypes, various ty...
Linkage is a phenomenon that correlates the genotypes of loci, rather than the phenotypes of one loc...
The identification of genes contributing to complex diseases and quantitative traits requires geneti...
There is a lot of confusion in the literature about the “differences” between “model-based” and “mod...
Although it is clear that errors in genotyping data can lead to severe errors in linkage analysis, t...
Detection of genotyping errors and integration of such errors in statistical analysis are relatively...
As more studies adopt the approach of whole-genome screening, geneticists are faced with the challen...
Gene-mapping studies routinely rely on checking for Mendelian transmission of marker alleles in a pe...
The rapid development of a dense single-nucleotide–polymorphism marker map has stimulated numerous s...
One way to perform linkage-disequilibrium (LD) mapping of genetic traits is to use single markers. S...
Most multipoint linkage programs assume linkage equilibrium among the markers being studied. The ass...
Single-marker linkage-disequilibrium (LD) methods cannot fully describe disequilibrium in an entire ...
SummaryTo refine the location of a disease gene within the bounds provided by linkage analysis, many...
SummaryBecause of their great abundance and amenability to fully automated genotyping, single-nucleo...
We present the results of a simulation study that indicate that true haplotypes at multiple, tightly...
In linkage and linkage disequilibrium (LD) analysis of complex multifactorial phenotypes, various ty...
Linkage is a phenomenon that correlates the genotypes of loci, rather than the phenotypes of one loc...
The identification of genes contributing to complex diseases and quantitative traits requires geneti...
There is a lot of confusion in the literature about the “differences” between “model-based” and “mod...
Although it is clear that errors in genotyping data can lead to severe errors in linkage analysis, t...
Detection of genotyping errors and integration of such errors in statistical analysis are relatively...
As more studies adopt the approach of whole-genome screening, geneticists are faced with the challen...
Gene-mapping studies routinely rely on checking for Mendelian transmission of marker alleles in a pe...
The rapid development of a dense single-nucleotide–polymorphism marker map has stimulated numerous s...
One way to perform linkage-disequilibrium (LD) mapping of genetic traits is to use single markers. S...
Most multipoint linkage programs assume linkage equilibrium among the markers being studied. The ass...
Single-marker linkage-disequilibrium (LD) methods cannot fully describe disequilibrium in an entire ...
SummaryTo refine the location of a disease gene within the bounds provided by linkage analysis, many...
SummaryBecause of their great abundance and amenability to fully automated genotyping, single-nucleo...
We present the results of a simulation study that indicate that true haplotypes at multiple, tightly...