STAT/BIOSTAT 550:
Statistical Genetics I; Discrete Mendelian traits
Distance Learning Version: Spring 2008

Instructor: Elizabeth Thompson

Single nucleotide polymorphisms are discrete Mendelian traits!

This course provides an introduction to the models and methods of Statistical Genetics for students with little Genetics background but with some knowledge of Probability and Statistics. The course provides a basis for further study in Statistical Genetics, whether in Quantitative Genetics, Human and Medical Genetics, Population and Evolutionary Genetics, or Computational Molecular Genetics.

The course material includes:
Simple Mendelian traits; Mendelian segregation, dominant and recessive traits, X-linked traits, patterns of inheritance. Population genetic issues; testing Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, likelihood estimation of allele frequencies, the EM algorithm. Haplotypes, allelic association and haplotyping. Likelihood estimation of haplotype frequencies. Mutation, selection, and random genetic drift.

Kinship and gene identity by descent; probabilities on pedigrees. Genetic linkage; meiosis and recombination, two-locus kinship and gene identity, linkage disequilibrium, Two-locus linkage analysis, the probabilities of meiosis patterns. Simple designs for two-locus linkage; testing for linkage, expected lod scores and power to detect linkage, homozygosity mapping.

Meiosis, recombination and map functions. Multipoint linkage analysis; the hidden Markov model for multipoint linkage. The Baum algorithms; the EM algorithm for map estimation. Likelihoods for linkage on large pedigrees: the Elston-Stewart algorithm.

Text:

Other useful books include:

[an error occurred while processing this directive]