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Netværksbaseret fylogenetisk analyse×Genomdækkende associationsstudie (GWAS)×
FagområdeBioinformatikBioinformatik
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Oprindelsesår1992–2004 (foundational algorithms); broader development 1990s–2010s2005–2007
OphavspersonHans-Jürgen Bandelt & Andreas Dress (split decomposition); David Bryant & Vincent Moulton (Neighbor-Net)Klein et al. (age-related macular degeneration GWAS, 2005); landmark scale: Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (2007)
TypeComputational phylogenetic methodObservational genomic association study
Oprindelig kildeBandelt, H.-J., & Dress, A. W. M. (1992). Split decomposition: A new and useful approach to phylogenetic analysis of distance data. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 1(3), 242–252. link ↗Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium. (2007). Genome-wide association study of 14,000 cases of seven common diseases and 3,000 shared controls. Nature, 447(7145), 661–678. link ↗
Aliasserphylogenetic network, reticulate phylogenetics, split network analysis, evolutionary network inferenceGWAS, genome-wide association analysis, whole-genome association study, WGAS
Relaterede66
ResuméNetwork-based phylogenetic analysis constructs graph-structured representations of evolutionary relationships that explicitly accommodate reticulate events — including hybridization, horizontal gene transfer, recombination, and incomplete lineage sorting — which strictly bifurcating phylogenetic trees cannot represent. Instead of forcing sequences into a single bifurcating tree, the method infers splits or reticulations in the data and visualises them as a network, revealing conflicting phylogenetic signals that are biologically informative.A genome-wide association study (GWAS) systematically tests hundreds of thousands to millions of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across the human genome for statistical association with a trait or disease. By comparing allele frequencies between cases and controls — or by regressing SNP genotypes on a quantitative phenotype — GWAS identifies genomic loci that harbor common genetic variants contributing to complex traits. Since its large-scale debut in 2007, GWAS has catalogued thousands of robust disease–variant associations across virtually every common human condition.
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ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Network-based Phylogenetic Analysis · Genome-wide association study. Hentet 2026-06-18 fra https://scholargate.app/da/compare