In a recent publication entitled "Limitations of GCTA as a solution to the missing heritability problem" Krishna Kumar et al. (2015 PNAS) claim that "GCTA applied to current SNP data cannot produce reliable or stable estimates of heritability". Here we show that those claims are false and that results presented by Krishna Kumar et al. are in fact entirely consistent with and can be predicted from the theory underlying GCTA.
Visscher's commentary on "Limitations of GCTA as a solution to the missing heritability problem"
Commentary on "Limitations of GCTA as a solution to the missing heritability problem" (abstract; pdf):
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2 comments:
and?
this is all irrelevant.
why?
because whether or not a given ethnicity or individual would be roughly the same irrespective of his environment is a UNIVERSALIST/JEWISH argument.
why bother?
the idea of a "universal nation" is an oxymoron and moronic.
the US is the single worst thing ever to happen to the world.
hie it to norway n/a. blue eyed blonds and 165k per person in its sovereign wealth fund. and highest median income outside of monaco and qatar.
when the roaches take over...don't try to kill them...move.
but maybe you're one of those with more than enough...
what excuse have america's indegenes...not native americans...
why haven't they all millions?
the answer is...
free market capitalism is jewish...
fuck off!
but very sadly n/a still loves jewish cock in all his holes.
he's yet to understand and confess...
HEIL HITLER!
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