The randomness that shapes our DNA

scientific article published on 09 October 2018

The randomness that shapes our DNA is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.7554/ELIFE.41491
P932PMC publication ID6177256
P698PubMed publication ID30296995

P50authorKelley HarrisQ86858279
P2093author name stringKelley Harris
P2860cites work8.2% of the Human genome is constrained: variation in rates of turnover across functional element classes in the human lineageQ21144867
Inferring the joint demographic history of multiple populations from multidimensional SNP frequency dataQ21144993
Evolutionary Rate at the Molecular LevelQ22122432
The effect of deleterious mutations on neutral molecular variationQ24532876
GC-content evolution in mammalian genomes: the biased gene conversion hypothesisQ24542511
The hitch-hiking effect of a favourable geneQ28241578
Effects of Linked Selective Sweeps on Demographic Inference and Model SelectionQ39412676
The consequences of not accounting for background selection in demographic inferenceQ40513900
An Upper Limit on the Functional Fraction of the Human GenomeQ41510688
Background selection and biased gene conversion affect more than 95% of the human genome and bias demographic inferencesQ57197854
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P577publication date2018-10-09
P1433published ineLifeQ2000008
P1476titleThe randomness that shapes our DNA
P478volume7

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q92465081Ancestry informative markers (AIMs) for Korean and other East Asian and South East Asian populations
Q98165390Identifying adaptive alleles in the human genome: from selection mapping to functional validation
Q62799620The natural selection that shapes our genomes
Q97588250Tumor somatic mutations also existing as germline polymorphisms may help to identify functional SNPs from genome wide association studies

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