A SPECTRAL GRAPH APPROACH TO DISCOVERING GENETIC ANCESTRY

Mapping human genetic variation is fundamentally interesting in fields such as anthropology and forensic inference. At the same time, patterns of genetic diversity confound efforts to determine the genetic basis of complex disease. Due to technological advances, it is now possible to measure hundred...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe annals of applied statistics Vol. 4; no. 1; p. 179
Main Authors Lee, Ann B, Luca, Diana, Roeder, Kathryn
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.03.2010
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ISSN1932-6157
1941-7330
DOI10.1214/09-aoas281

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Summary:Mapping human genetic variation is fundamentally interesting in fields such as anthropology and forensic inference. At the same time, patterns of genetic diversity confound efforts to determine the genetic basis of complex disease. Due to technological advances, it is now possible to measure hundreds of thousands of genetic variants per individual across the genome. Principal component analysis (PCA) is routinely used to summarize the genetic similarity between subjects. The eigenvectors are interpreted as dimensions of ancestry. We build on this idea using a spectral graph approach. In the process we draw on connections between multidimensional scaling and spectral kernel methods. Our approach, based on a spectral embedding derived from the normalized Laplacian of a graph, can produce more meaningful delineation of ancestry than by using PCA. The method is stable to outliers and can more easily incorporate different similarity measures of genetic data than PCA. We illustrate a new algorithm for genetic clustering and association analysis on a large, genetically heterogeneous sample.
ISSN:1932-6157
1941-7330
DOI:10.1214/09-aoas281