Coalescents and genealogical structure under neutrality.

Genealogical or coalescent methods have proved very useful in interpreting and understanding a wide range of population genetic data. Our aim is to illustrate some of the central ideas behind this approach. The primary focus is genealogy in neutral genetic models, for which the effects of demography...

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Main Authors: Donnelly, P, Tavaré, S
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1995
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author Donnelly, P
Tavaré, S
author_facet Donnelly, P
Tavaré, S
author_sort Donnelly, P
collection OXFORD
description Genealogical or coalescent methods have proved very useful in interpreting and understanding a wide range of population genetic data. Our aim is to illustrate some of the central ideas behind this approach. The primary focus is genealogy in neutral genetic models, for which the effects of demography can be separated from those of mutation. We describe the coalescent for panmictic populations of fixed size, and its extensions to incorporate various assumptions about variation in population size and nonrandom mating caused by geographical population subdivision. The effects of such genealogical structure on patterns and correlations in genetic data are discussed. An urn model is useful for simulating samples at loci with complex mutation mechanisms. We give two applications of the genealogical approach. The first concerns methods for estimating the mutation rate from infinitely-many-sites data, and the second relates to inference about recent common ancestors and population history.
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spelling oxford-uuid:28bce823-97c3-432a-b13f-22f2abc7de122022-03-26T12:14:45ZCoalescents and genealogical structure under neutrality.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:28bce823-97c3-432a-b13f-22f2abc7de12EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1995Donnelly, PTavaré, SGenealogical or coalescent methods have proved very useful in interpreting and understanding a wide range of population genetic data. Our aim is to illustrate some of the central ideas behind this approach. The primary focus is genealogy in neutral genetic models, for which the effects of demography can be separated from those of mutation. We describe the coalescent for panmictic populations of fixed size, and its extensions to incorporate various assumptions about variation in population size and nonrandom mating caused by geographical population subdivision. The effects of such genealogical structure on patterns and correlations in genetic data are discussed. An urn model is useful for simulating samples at loci with complex mutation mechanisms. We give two applications of the genealogical approach. The first concerns methods for estimating the mutation rate from infinitely-many-sites data, and the second relates to inference about recent common ancestors and population history.
spellingShingle Donnelly, P
Tavaré, S
Coalescents and genealogical structure under neutrality.
title Coalescents and genealogical structure under neutrality.
title_full Coalescents and genealogical structure under neutrality.
title_fullStr Coalescents and genealogical structure under neutrality.
title_full_unstemmed Coalescents and genealogical structure under neutrality.
title_short Coalescents and genealogical structure under neutrality.
title_sort coalescents and genealogical structure under neutrality
work_keys_str_mv AT donnellyp coalescentsandgenealogicalstructureunderneutrality
AT tavares coalescentsandgenealogicalstructureunderneutrality