Quantitative Genetic Models for Describing Simultaneous and Recursive Relationships Between Phenotypes<b>This article is dedicated to Arthur B. Chapman, teacher and mentor of numerous animal breeding students and disciple and friend of Sewall Wright.</b>

  • Daniel Gianola
    Departments of Animal Sciences, Dairy Science and Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
  • Daniel Sorensen
    Department of Animal Breeding and Genetics, Danish Institute of Agricultural Sciences, 8830 Tjele, Denmark

説明

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>Multivariate models are of great importance in theoretical and applied quantitative genetics. We extend quantitative genetic theory to accommodate situations in which there is linear feedback or recursiveness between the phenotypes involved in a multivariate system, assuming an infinitesimal, additive, model of inheritance. It is shown that structural parameters defining a simultaneous or recursive system have a bearing on the interpretation of quantitative genetic parameter estimates (e.g., heritability, offspring-parent regression, genetic correlation) when such features are ignored. Matrix representations are given for treating a plethora of feedback-recursive situations. The likelihood function is derived, assuming multivariate normality, and results from econometric theory for parameter identification are adapted to a quantitative genetic setting. A Bayesian treatment with a Markov chain Monte Carlo implementation is suggested for inference and developed. When the system is fully recursive, all conditional posterior distributions are in closed form, so Gibbs sampling is straightforward. If there is feedback, a Metropolis step may be embedded for sampling the structural parameters, since their conditional distributions are unknown. Extensions of the model to discrete random variables and to nonlinear relationships between phenotypes are discussed.</jats:p>

収録刊行物

  • Genetics

    Genetics 167 (3), 1407-1424, 2004-07-01

    Oxford University Press (OUP)

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