Haplotypes provide a more informative format of polymorphisms for genetic association analysis than do individual single-nucleotide polymorphisms. However, the practical efficacy of haplotype-based association analysis is challenged by a trade-off between the benefits of modeling abundant variation and the cost of the extra degrees of freedom. To reduce the degrees of freedom, several strategies have been considered in the literature. They include (1) clustering evolutionarily close haplotypes, (2) modeling the level of haplotype sharing, and (3) smoothing haplotype effects by introducing a correlation structure for haplotype effects and studying the variance components (VC) for association. Although the first two strategies enjoy a fair ex...
In Chapter 2, we compare the power of association studies using cases and screened controls to studi...
ABSTRACT For complex traits, most associated single nucleotide variants (SNV) discovered to date hav...
Association tests based on multi-marker haplotypes may be more powerful than those based on single m...
Haplotypes provide a more informative format of polymorphisms for genetic association analysis than ...
Large-scale haplotype association analysis, especially at the whole-genome level, is still a very ch...
A decade ago, genomewide association studies were proposed as a tool to unravel the genetic basis of...
Recent studies have shown that the human genome has a haplotype block structure, such that it can be...
In genetic mapping of complex traits, scored haplotypes are likely to represent only a subset of all...
Haplotype-based association analysis has been recognized as a tool with high resolution and potentia...
Association studies offer an exciting approach to finding underlying genetic variants of complex hum...
Large-scale, multilocus genetic association studies require powerful and appropriate statistical-ana...
Multilocus analysis of single-nucleotide–polymorphism (SNP) haplotypes may provide evidence of assoc...
The arrival of publicly available genome-wide variation data is creating new opportunities for recon...
The haplotype association analysis has been proposed to capture the collective behavior of sets of v...
Marker-trait association analysis is an important statistical tool for detecting DNA variants respon...
In Chapter 2, we compare the power of association studies using cases and screened controls to studi...
ABSTRACT For complex traits, most associated single nucleotide variants (SNV) discovered to date hav...
Association tests based on multi-marker haplotypes may be more powerful than those based on single m...
Haplotypes provide a more informative format of polymorphisms for genetic association analysis than ...
Large-scale haplotype association analysis, especially at the whole-genome level, is still a very ch...
A decade ago, genomewide association studies were proposed as a tool to unravel the genetic basis of...
Recent studies have shown that the human genome has a haplotype block structure, such that it can be...
In genetic mapping of complex traits, scored haplotypes are likely to represent only a subset of all...
Haplotype-based association analysis has been recognized as a tool with high resolution and potentia...
Association studies offer an exciting approach to finding underlying genetic variants of complex hum...
Large-scale, multilocus genetic association studies require powerful and appropriate statistical-ana...
Multilocus analysis of single-nucleotide–polymorphism (SNP) haplotypes may provide evidence of assoc...
The arrival of publicly available genome-wide variation data is creating new opportunities for recon...
The haplotype association analysis has been proposed to capture the collective behavior of sets of v...
Marker-trait association analysis is an important statistical tool for detecting DNA variants respon...
In Chapter 2, we compare the power of association studies using cases and screened controls to studi...
ABSTRACT For complex traits, most associated single nucleotide variants (SNV) discovered to date hav...
Association tests based on multi-marker haplotypes may be more powerful than those based on single m...