<p><P></P><P>Population genetics occupies a central role in a number of important biological and social undertakings. It is fundamental to our understanding of evolutionary processes, of plant and animal breeding programs, and of various diseases of particular importance to mankind. This is the firs
Introduction to Theoretical Population Genetics
β Scribed by Thomas Nagylaki (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 380
- Series
- Biomathematics 21
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book covers those areas of theoretical population genetics that can be investigated rigorously by elementary mathematical methods. I have tried to formulate the various models fairly generally and to state the biological asΒ sumptions quite explicitly. I hope the choice and treatment of topics will enΒ able the reader to understand and evaluate detailed analyses of many specific models and applications in the literature. Models in population genetics are highly idealized, often even overΒ idealized, and their connection with observation is frequently remote. FurtherΒ more, it is not practicable to measure the parameters and variables in these models with high accuracy. These regrettable circumstances amply justify the use of appropriate, lucid, and rigorous approximations in the analysis of our models, and such approximations are often illuminating even when exact soluΒ tions are available. However, our empirical and theoretical limitations justify neither opaque, incomplete formulations nor unconvincing, inadequate analyΒ ses, for these may produce uninterpretable, misleading, or erroneous results. Intuition is a principal source of ideas for the construction and investigation of models, but it can replace neither clear formulation nor careful analysis. Fisher (1930; 1958, pp. x, 23-24, 38) not only espoused similar ideas, but he recognized also that our concepts of intuition and rigor must evolve in time. The book is neither a review of the literature nor a compendium of results. The material is almost entirely self-contained. The first eight chapters are a thoroughly revised and greatly extended version of my published lecture notes (Nagylaki, 1977a).
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XI
Introduction....Pages 1-4
Asexual Haploid Populations....Pages 5-27
Panmictic Populations....Pages 28-46
Selection at an Autosomal Locus....Pages 47-101
Nonrandom Mating....Pages 102-127
Migration and Selection....Pages 128-152
X -Linkage....Pages 153-173
Two Loci....Pages 174-199
Inbreeding and Random Drift....Pages 200-278
Quantitative Genetics....Pages 279-339
Back Matter....Pages 340-369
β¦ Subjects
Computer Appl. in Life Sciences; Mathematical and Computational Biology
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This textbook, originally published in 1970, presents the field of population genetics, starting with elementary concepts and leading the reader well into the field. It is concerned mainly with population genetics in a strict sense and deals primarily with natural populations and less fully with the
This textbook, originally published in 1970, presents the field of population genetics, starting with elementary concepts and leading the reader well into the field. It is concerned mainly with population genetics in a strict sense and deals primarily with natural populations and less fully with the
This textbook, originally published in 1970, presents the field of population genetics, starting with elementary concepts and leading the reader well into the field. It is concerned mainly with population genetics in a strict sense and deals primarily with natural populations and less fully with the