Journal article

Population structure and cryptic relatedness in genetic association studies

W Astle, DJ Balding

Statistical Science | Published : 2009

Abstract

We review the problem of confounding in genetic association studies, which arises principally because of population structure and cryptic relatedness. Many treatments of the problem consider only a simple "island" model of population structure. We take a broader approach, which views population structure and cryptic relatedness as different aspects of a single confounder: the unobserved pedigree defining the (often distant) relationships among the study subjects. Kinship is therefore a central concept, and we review methods of defining and estimating kinship coefficients, both pedigree-based and marker-based. In this unified framework we review solutions to the problem of population structur..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Funding Acknowledgements

We gratefully acknowledge helpful discussions from many colleagues, including Yurii Aulchenko, David Clayton, Clive Hoggart, Chris Holmes, Matti Pirinen, Sylvia Richardson and Jon White, and, in particular, Francois Balloux, Dan Stram and Mike Weale for helpful comments on an early draft. This work was supported in part by the UK Medical Research Council and GlaxoSmithKline.