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The program anticipates rapid development of the subject of
Evolutionary and Population Genetics driven by efforts to map single
nucleotide polymorphisms and the opportunities resulting from
high-throughput techniques of genotyping, re-sequencing and phenotyping.
Haplotype reconstruction, recombination hot-spot mapping, ancestry
inference, and selective and demographic inference, all present
computational and statistical challenges that could potentially benefit from
the injection of methods from other fields that may foster the development
of novel ideas and approaches. Fruitful interactions will be facilitated by
the peculiar status of the field in biology, traditionally featuring a
stronger role of theory and models.
Neutral dynamics provides for a general classical framework, of importance
both for its rich statistical dynamics and for a benchmark to efficiently
identify genomic loci affected by other mechanisms such as natural
selection, demography and migrations. Experimental data require a detailed
discrimination among these evolutionary scenarios and typically call for
multiple-loci genomic methods and the analysis of quantitative traits.
Precious information is also extracted from comparative analyses, and it is
easily foreseen that their importance will further grow as the cost of
sequencing methods steadily declines. Infectious diseases exert strong
selection pressures, so that genetic variants influencing human
susceptibility to disease have an intimate relationship to selection that
can be exploited for the identification of candidate disease loci. Data for
human populations naturally couple the field to public-health issues.
Associated studies have already provided important clues on genomic loci
involved in diseases, and analysis of the diversity and differential
response to drugs will be fundamental in developing individual-specific drug
treatments.
The goal of the program is to gather world experts in these different
disciplines to present their state of the art and to stimulate interactions
among them. Key areas to be covered include:
- Statistical mechanics, inference problems, and algorithms for population
genomics
- What to do with Single Nucleotide Polymorphism and re-sequencing data?
- Databases (HapMap, Perlegen, etc.), inference and recombination hotspots
- Structural polymorphisms
- Signatures of natural selection on genomic scale
- Comparative Genomics
- Demographic inference: Origins and migrations of populations
- The role of human genetic diversity in drug response and human diseases
Questions should be directed to one of the program coordinators.
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