Tag Archives: linkage

Some of us are old enough

There is a great comment over at PubPeer about a rather weak and biased paper about 15 years of GWAS studies

Some of us are old enough to remember what was originally promised by genome-wide association studies (GWASs): we would finally discover the genes aetiologically involved in the conditions which till then we had been researching using a combination of linkage and candidate gene association studies. Clearly, this has not happened. With the benefit of hindsight and a myriad actual results we now clearly appreciate what perhaps we should always have realised, which is that common variants do not have substantial effects on phenotypes. GWASs yield complex, difficult to interpret findings which implicate variants but not genes and have not delivered the insights which we were promised they would.

Waiting to exhale

Waiting to exhale was a book in 1992 (“Right now I am supposed to be all geeked up”). Waiting to exhale then was a movie in 1995 (“Friends are the people who let you be yourself… and never let you forget it”). And finally Waiting to exhale was the title of a meeting report 1995 Continue reading Waiting to exhale

In the heat of the night

Sorry for a misleading title, but it is a nice idea to use heatmaps also for conditional linkage (or SNP association) results. Seen at the Heidelberg meeting. Sorry also, to show a figure that is severely cropped and blurred to maintain the authors right on their data, yea, yea.

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