Recent advances in genome-wide association and sequencing studies have shown that the genetic architecture of complex traits and diseases involves a combination of rare and common genetic variants distributed throughout the genome. One way to better understand this architecture is to visualize genetic associations across a wide range of allele frequencies. However, there is currently no standardized or consistent graphical representation for effectively illustrating these results. Here we propose a standardized approach for visualizing the effect size of risk variants across the allele frequency spectrum. The proposed plots have a distinctive trumpet shape: with the majority of variants having high frequency and small effects, and a small number of variants having lower frequency and larger effects. To demonstrate the utility of trumpet plots in illustrating the relationship between the number of variants, their frequency, and the magnitude of their effects in shaping the genetic architecture of complex traits and diseases, we generated trumpet plots for more than one hundred traits in the UK Biobank. To facilitate their broader use, we developed an R package, 'TrumpetPlots' (available at the Comprehensive R Archive Network) and R Shiny application, 'Shiny Trumpets' (available at https://juditgg.shinyapps.io/shinytrumpets/) that allows users to explore these results and submit their own data.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.46471/gigabyte.89 | DOI Listing |
GigaByte
September 2023
Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, NY 10029, USA.
Sensors (Basel)
July 2014
Department of Medical Chemistry and Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University, Hnevotinska 3, Olomouc 775 15, Czech Republic.
In electrochemical sensing, a number of voltammetric or amperometric curves are obtained which are subsequently processed, typically by evaluating peak currents and peak potentials or wave heights and half-wave potentials, frequently after background correction. Transformations of voltammetric data can help to extract specific information, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
August 2013
Department of Music, University of St Andrews, Beethoven Lodge, 65 North Street, St Andrews, Fife KY16 9AJ, United Kingdom.
Wave separation within a trumpet is presented using three high pressure microphones to measure pressure waves within the curved, constant cross-section tuning slide of the instrument while the instrument was being played by a virtuoso trumpet player. A closer inter-microphone spacing was possible in comparison to previous work through the use of time domain windowing on non-causal transfer functions and performing wave separation in the frequency domain. Time domain plots of the experimental wave separation were then compared to simulations using a physical model based on a time domain finite difference simulation of the trumpet bore coupled to a one mass, two degree of freedom lip model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Phys
February 2009
Radiation Dosimetry Laboratory, Health Physics Division, Directorate of Systems & Services, Pakistan Institute of Nuclear Science & Technology, Nilore, Islamabad, Pakistan.
An intercomparison exercise for personal dosimetry service providers within Pakistan was conducted by the Health Physics Division of the Pakistan Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology. Participation in the exercise was on voluntary basis. The exercise was carried out to harmonize individual dose monitoring techniques for high energy photons in terms of a new operational quantity, namely personal dose equivalent Hp(10), for personal dosimetry in accordance with the recommendations of the International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
September 2004
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of California, Irvine, California 92697-2575, USA.
Exhaled nitric oxide (NO) is a potential noninvasive index of lung inflammation and is thought to arise from the alveolar and airway regions of the lungs. A two-compartment model has been used to describe NO exchange; however, the model neglects axial diffusion of NO in the gas phase, and recent theoretical studies suggest that this may introduce significant error. We used heliox (80% helium, 20% oxygen) as the insufflating gas to probe the impact of axial diffusion (molecular diffusivity of NO is increased 2.
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