Genetic Studies for Ordinal Traits
Heping Zhang
Professor of Biostatistics
Yale University
School of Medicine
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
3:30pm
Moos 2-690
Minneapolis Campus
Abstract:
For complex diseases, especially mental health conditions including nicotine
dependence and substance use, the outcome variables are often recorded in an
ordinal rather than quantitative scale. The naturally recorded ordinal traits
are usually analyzed either as quantitative traits or being dichotomised. It
has been demonstrated repeatedly in recent studies that this commonly used approach
to dealing with ordinal traits is inadequate and results in loss of power. After
discussing general principles and an overview of related work, Heping will present
score test statistics that belong to a general class of family-based association
tests (FBATs) for ordinal traits. This new approach can adjust for the effects
of covariates. Simulation results will be presented compare the type I error
and the power of their proposed tests with existing tests. The empirical result
suggests that their test produces reasonable type I errors and has better power
than the existing tests. The proposed test was used to analyze GAW14 data on
alcoholism and identified several single nucleotide polymorphisms including
rs485874, rs619, rs718251, rs1869907 that are significantly associated with
alcohol dependence after adjusting for gender and age.
This talk reflects the series of joint work with Rui Feng, Xueqin Wang, Hongtu
Zhu, and Yuanqing Ye.
A social tea will be held at 3:00 P.M. in A434 Mayo. All are Welcome.
For more details contact 612-624-4655 or see http://www.biostat.umn.edu/seminar_academic.html