Literature DB >> 10446465

Regression diagnostics for the class A regressive model with quantitative phenotypes.

H M Wang1, M P Jones, T L Burns.   

Abstract

Regression diagnostic methods are developed and investigated under the Class A regressive model proposed by Bonney [(1984) Am J Med Genet 18:731-749]. We call a family whose phenotypic distribution does not conform to the same genetic model as the majority of the families an etiotic family. The exact case-deletion approach for identifying etiotic families, based on examining the changes in each model parameter estimate by excluding one family at a time, is very time-consuming. We proposed three alternative diagnostic methods: the empirical influence function (EIF), the one-step approximation, and the approximated one-step approach. These methods can be computed efficiently and were incorporated into the existing software package S.A.G.E. A thorough Monte-Carlo investigation of the performance of the diagnostic methods was conducted and generally supports the EIF approach as the recommended alternative. The phenotypic variance is the parameter whose associated regression diagnostic most frequently and correctly identified etiotic families in the models that were examined. An analysis of body mass index data from 402 individuals in 122 Muscatine, Iowa families is used to illustrate the methods. A Class A regressive model with a recessive major locus and equal mother-offspring and father-offspring correlations provided the best-fitting model. The proposed regression diagnostics identified up to 7.4% of the 122 families as etiotic. As a result of this investigation, case-deletion diagnostic assessment is now a practical component in the analysis of quantitative family data. Copyright 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10446465     DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1098-2272(1999)17:3<174::AID-GEPI3>3.0.CO;2-G

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genet Epidemiol        ISSN: 0741-0395            Impact factor:   2.135


  2 in total

1.  Case-deletion diagnostics for maximum likelihood multipoint quantitative trait locus linkage analysis.

Authors:  Maria C B Mendoza; Trudy L Burns; Michael P Jones
Journal:  Hum Hered       Date:  2009-01-27       Impact factor: 0.444

2.  Bayesian Case Influence Measures for Statistical Models with Missing Data.

Authors:  Hongtu Zhu; Joseph G Ibrahim; Hyunsoon Cho; Niansheng Tang
Journal:  J Comput Graph Stat       Date:  2010-08-01       Impact factor: 2.302

  2 in total

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