Biostat 580B - Statistical Genetics Seminar
Biostat 580B - Statistical Genetics Seminar
1 credit
Spring Quarter 2002
Seminar: Tuesday 4:00-5:00, PROBABLY in F643 HSB (biostatistics conference room)
(The time schedule is showing T530, but I have requested Biostat conf room as usual.)
For convenience: this page is in Stat -- it will be transferred back to
homer after the quarter. Note that some of the links below will only
work from homer page -- but I am not going to fix them as then I will have
to fix them back.
Remember the important questions:
Why? What? Why? How? Why? What next? and WHY?
(Why is this question important? What did they do? Why did they choose this appr
oach?
How did they do it? Why did they choose these methods? What should
come next? Why is this paper important? )
Reminder: Everyone should read the papers for weeks in which we read a journal article.
If the paper is available electronically, we will provide the reference, and
you may download your own copy from
the
healthlinks web site,
or through the
UW e-journals page.
If the paper is not available electronically,
the discussion leaders should make 2 copies, and should put one copy in each of
the
stat mailbox and the biostat 580B homework folder, preferably a week ahead of time.
The stat mailbox is in the mail room in statistics;
the biostat 580B homework folder is
in the top left drawer underneath the biostat mailboxes in a folder to the far l
eft
as you face the mailboxes.
Others should then make their copies from one of these two copies.
Discussion leaders are only expected to spend 20-30 minutes (jointly)
presenting the assigned paper(s). If you don't understand everything, focus on
what you can, and try to think about what is important about the papers, and
what open questions you are left with.
MAKE SURE YOU LEAVE ADEQUATE TIME FOR
DISCUSSION.
Spring 2002 SCHEDULE
Katie Kerr has agreed to "oversee" StatGen for April 2 and 9.
Thank you Katie!
April 2: Paul Scheet and Peter Mork
April 9: Saonli Basu and Bill Stewart
- Terwilliger et al., Human Hered (1998), 48: 138-154
April 16: Elizabeth Thompson
- Topic: EMGM, GAW and IGES -- 30 years
of Statistical Genetics
There will also be time to set the schedule for the last 6 weeks:
unless there are other suggestions we will continue with the two
themes of complex traits and linkage disequilibrium (separately or
together),
April 23: Anne-Louise Leutenegger
- Topic:
Anne-Louise will talk on the topic of her recently submitted MLS
paper
April 30: Xuesong Yu, Michael Li
- Mark Abney, Carole Ober and Mary Sara McPeek (2002)
Quantitative-trait homozygosity and association mapping and
empirical genomewide significance in large, complex pedigrees: fasting
serum-insulin level in the Hutterites.
AJHG, 70: 920-934
May 7: Solly Sieberts, Grace Ge
May 14: Dongmei Yu
- T.H.E. Meuwissen and M.E. Goddard (2000)
Fine mapping of quantitative trait loci using linkage disequilibria with
closely linked marker loci. Genetics 155:421-430.
(This was Dongmei's STAT551 project paper, which she could not present last
quarter. Is there anyone not yet signed up who would like to join Dongmei
and present either some background or some follow-up for this paper?)
May 21: Amy Anderson, Lixuan Qin
May 28: Elisabeth Rosenthal, Joe Rothstein
June 4: Zheng Zhang, Lance Jolley (Probable paper choice)
Other suggested papers
- PM McKeigue (1997) Mapping genes underlying ethnic differences in
disease risk by linkage disequilibrium in recently admixed populations.
Am J Hum Genet 60: 188-196.
- PM McKeigue (1998) Mapping genes that underlie ethnic differences in
disease risk: methods for detecting linkage in admixed populations,
by conditioning on parental
admixture.
Am J Hum Genet 63(1):241-251
We did do this one in Winter 2000 -- however there has been
quite a lot of turnover in StatGen since then -- and those who remember it
can assist the discussion.
- A.P. Morris, J.~C. Whittaker and D.~J. Balding (2002): suggested by Michael
Fine-scale mapping of disease loci via shattered coalescent
modeling of genealogies.
AJHG, 70: 686-707.
- Regression Models for Linkage Heterogeneity Applied to Familial Prostate
Cancer
Daniel J. Schaid, Shannon K. McDonnell, and Stephen N. Thibodeau
Am. J. Hum. Genet., 68:1189-1196, 2001
- A Confidence-Set Approach for Finding Tightly Linked Genomic Regions
Shili Lin, James A. Rogers, and Jason C. Hsu
Am. J. Hum. Genet., 68:1219-1228, 2001
- Problems in the Definition, Interpretation, and Evaluation of Genetic
Heterogeneity
Alice S. Whittemore and Jerry Halpern
Am. J. Hum. Genet., 68:457-465, 2001
Statistical Genetics Computing in Biostat
Statistical Genetics at UW has
software installed for the use of UW StatGen students and others.
This software is installed and maintained at
our Statgen Biostatistics computing page. To use the software,
a biostat computing account is needed:
Biostat 580B seminar participants may obtain an account through this class.
(Since this is an ongoing class, with ongoing participation by StatGen people
(we hope!), we believe this will lead to less admin headaches for all.)
Please note: Your Biostat computing account given
in connection with
the Statistical Genetics seminar is for learning and exploring the software,
not
for doing your research computing. Your research computing should be done
on computing resources allocated for that purpose.
http://courses.washington.edu/b580b
Last updated:
Tuesday, 21-May-2002 14:03:44 PDT
Return to Biostat Homepage
These pages are Copyright © 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 by University of
Washington, including all images and photographs (of more than 20,000 pixels
in size) unless otherwise noted.