TY - JOUR T1 - A Tutorial of the Poisson Random Field Model in Population Genetics JF - Advances in Bioinformatics Y1 - 2008 A1 - Sethupathy,Praveen A1 - Hannenhalli, Sridhar AB - Population genetics is the study of allele frequency changes driven by various evolutionary forces such as mutation, natural selection, and random genetic drift. Although natural selection is widely recognized as a bona-fide phenomenon, the extent to which it drives evolution continues to remain unclear and controversial. Various qualitative techniques, or so-called “tests of neutrality”, have been introduced to detect signatures of natural selection. A decade and a half ago, Stanley Sawyer and Daniel Hartl provided a mathematical framework, referred to as the Poisson random field (PRF), with which to determine quantitatively the intensity of selection on a particular gene or genomic region. The recent availability of large-scale genetic polymorphism data has sparked widespread interest in genome-wide investigations of natural selection. To that end, the original PRF model is of particular interest for geneticists and evolutionary genomicists. In this article, we will provide a tutorial of the mathematical derivation of the original Sawyer and Hartl PRF model. VL - 2008 SN - 1687-8027, 1687-8035 UR - http://www.hindawi.com/journals/abi/2008/257864/ M3 - 10.1155/2008/257864 ER -