Publication | Open Access
Comparison of methods for correcting population stratification in a genome-wide association study of rheumatoid arthritis: principal-component analysis versus multidimensional scaling
75
Citations
10
References
2009
Year
Genetic EpidemiologyCorrect PsHuman PolymorphismGenomicsGenome-wide Association AnalysisGenome-wide Association StudiesGenome-wide Association StudyRheumatoid DisorderGenotype-phenotype AssociationInflammatory Rheumatic DiseaseBiostatisticsPublic HealthStatisticsRheumatoid ArthritisPersonal GenomicsRheumatologyHaplotype DeterminationAutoimmune DiseaseStatistical GeneticsBioinformaticsEpidemiologyPopulation StratificationPrincipal-component AnalysisMedicine
Population stratification (PS) represents a major challenge in genome-wide association studies. Using the Genetic Analysis Workshop 16 Problem 1 data, which include samples of rheumatoid arthritis patients and healthy controls, we compared two methods that can be used to evaluate population structure and correct PS in genome-wide association studies: the principal-component analysis method and the multidimensional-scaling method. While both methods identified similar population structures in this dataset, principal-component analysis performed slightly better than the multidimensional-scaling method in correcting for PS in genome-wide association analysis of this dataset.
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