A brief note on the resemblance between relatives in the presence of population stratification

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Abstract

Population stratification occurs when a study population is comprised of several sub-populations, and can result in increased false positive findings in genomewide-association studies. Recently published work shows that sub-population-specific positive assortative mating at the genotypic level results in population stratification. We show that if the allele frequency of a single nucleotide polymorphism responsible for a trait varies between sub-populations and there is no dominance variance, then the heritability of the trait increases, primarily due to an increase in the additive genetic variance of the trait. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.

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Sebro, R., & Risch, N. J. (2012). A brief note on the resemblance between relatives in the presence of population stratification. Heredity, 108(5), 563–568. https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.2011.124

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