| Literature DB >> 28024154 |
Jonathan Terhorst1, John A Kamm1,2, Yun S Song1,2,3,4.
Abstract
It has recently been demonstrated that inference methods based on genealogical processes with recombination can uncover past population history in unprecedented detail. However, these methods scale poorly with sample size, limiting resolution in the recent past, and they require phased genomes, which contain switch errors that can catastrophically distort the inferred history. Here we present SMC++, a new statistical tool capable of analyzing orders of magnitude more samples than existing methods while requiring only unphased genomes (its results are independent of phasing). SMC++ can jointly infer population size histories and split times in diverged populations, and it employs a novel spline regularization scheme that greatly reduces estimation error. We apply SMC++ to analyze sequence data from over a thousand human genomes in Africa and Eurasia, hundreds of genomes from a Drosophila melanogaster population in Africa, and tens of genomes from zebra finch and long-tailed finch populations in Australia.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28024154 PMCID: PMC5470542 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330