PDF: Press release (pdf)
The following topics are covered:
- Lynn B. Jorde, PhD (Moderator) – “Using Whole-genome Data to Reveal Distant Relationships Between Individuals by Analysis of Genomic Segments Shared Identically by Descent”
- Lalji Singh, PhD – “Genetic Diversity in Indian Populations and its Health Implications”
- Carlos D. Bustamante, PhD – “Genomic Reconstruction of an Extinct Population from Next-Generation Sequence Data: Insights from the Taìno Genome Project”
- David E. Reich, PhD – “Denisova Genetic Admixture and the First Modern Human Population Dispersals into Southeast Asia and Oceania”
Some comments:
- Interesting tidbit from David Reich's talk, referring to the earliest ANI/ASI work: "We now know in unpublished work from our laboratory that Europeans are anciently mixed just like South Asians".
- Lynn Jorde mentions that one of the advantages of full genome sequencing is that it is not as susceptible to biases related to SNP discovery in micorarrays, and David Reich adds that current microarrays don't even begin to cover variation in Indians, e.g., missing a major disease susceptibility locus
3 comments:
Ah yes! More fuel for the fire. Mysteries fit for the Master himself, Sherlock Holmes.
You are fount of knowledge from many sources. Thank you for all you do!
Dienekes, any idea when the following lectures will be released in journal/paper-form?
- Estimating a date of mixture of ancestral South Asian populations.
- Genetic Diversity in Indian Populations and its Health Implications
"We now know in unpublished work from our laboratory that Europeans are anciently mixed just like South Asians".
What does that mean?
And when he says that the south asians are anciently mixed is he referring to the genetic imprint in South Asians from that old migration along the Indian Ocean, or is he just saying that the South Asians are mix of east and west Eurasians, which happened a long time ago?
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