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Adding a list of refs related to genetic trends, part method, and use cases #16

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Adding a list of refs related to genetic trends, part method, and use cases

@david20011999
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Here you have ;)

Genetic trends development:

  • Henderson et al., 1959 https://doi.org/10.2307/2527669 It describes a way of handling biases due to culling, which was a challenging issue in animal breeding research, thus improving the reliability of genetic trend estimates over time.
  • Blair and Pollark, 1984. https://doi.org/10.2527/jas1984.584878x A selection experiment with a control population was performed and the breeding values of the selected population were used to obtain the genetic trend. Fixed effects of both populations were compared to avoid bias.
  • Sorensen and Kennedy, 1984 https://doi.org/10.2527/jas1984.5851097x It proposes a Bayesian method of the mixed model that allows calculating genetic trends (and estimates in general) avoiding possible biases by incorporating fixed and random effects

Partitioning method

Partitioning method extensions

Aplication of the partitioning method

@gregorgorjanc
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@david20011999 thanks! Have used some of your suggestions;)

@alegarra
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alegarra commented Jan 2, 2025

The notion that one could get trends from BLUOP analysis was not that obvious. See http://www.jstor.org/stable/2529955 who says `Recentlythe BLUP method has been taken to its logical conclusion and Hintz, Everett andVanVleck(1978)have given estimatesof genetic trend using BLUP predictors of bulls and cows. Van Vleck (1977) presents these results, plotting genetic merit for cows against year of first calving.I find it difficult to interpret such graphs because the changes in genetic merit over time are partly due to changes in selection pressure over time.One possibility, by analogy with selection experiments is to plot genetic merit against selection differential. This might make it easier to interpret changes in genetic merit over time."

A good example of partition of genetic trend with Bayesian accounting of incertitude and UPGs: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030296766043

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