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Diffusion Approximations for Demographic Inference: DaDi
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  • Published: 30 June 2010

Diffusion Approximations for Demographic Inference: DaDi

  • Ryan Gutenkunst1,
  • Ryan Hernandez2,
  • Scott Williamson3 &
  • …
  • Carlos Bustamante4 

Nature Precedings (2010)Cite this article

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Abstract

Models of demographic history (population sizes, migration rates, and divergence times) inferred from genetic data complement archeology and serve as null models in genome scans for selection. Most current inference methods are computationally limited to considering simple models or non-recombining data. We introduce a method based on a diffusion approximation to the joint frequency spectrum of genetic variation between populations. Our implementation, DaDi, can model up to three interacting populations and scales well to genome-wide data. We have applied DaDi to human data from Africa, Europe, and East Asia, building the most complex statistically well-characterized model of human migration out of Africa to date.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. Los Alamos National Laboratory https://www.nature.com/nature

    Ryan Gutenkunst

  2. University of Chicago https://www.nature.com/nature

    Ryan Hernandez

  3. Cornell University https://www.nature.com/nature

    Scott Williamson

  4. Stanford University https://www.nature.com/nature

    Carlos Bustamante

Authors
  1. Ryan Gutenkunst
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  2. Ryan Hernandez
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  3. Scott Williamson
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  4. Carlos Bustamante
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Corresponding author

Correspondence to Ryan Gutenkunst.

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Gutenkunst, R., Hernandez, R., Williamson, S. et al. Diffusion Approximations for Demographic Inference: DaDi. Nat Prec (2010). https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2010.4594.1

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  • Received: 30 June 2010

  • Accepted: 30 June 2010

  • Published: 30 June 2010

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2010.4594.1

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Keywords

  • diffusion
  • frequency spectrum
  • population genetics
  • demographic history

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