Human Evolutionary Genetics

Regular price €100.99
A01=Chris Tyler-Smith
A01=Edward Hollox
A01=Mark Jobling
A01=Toomas Kivisild
admixture
advanced human genetic diversity research
African Neolithic
Allele Frequency
Ancient DNA
Ancient DNA Analysis
Ancient DNA Study
ancient genome sequencing
ancient sample
Andaaman Islands
anthropological genetics
ape genome project
apportionment of diversity
archeology
assortative mating
Australia
Author_Chris Tyler-Smith
Author_Edward Hollox
Author_Mark Jobling
Author_Toomas Kivisild
base misincorporation
base substitution
Basques
bioinformatics
biparentally-inherited nuclear DNA marker
black Jew
BLAST
carbon dating
Category=PSAK
chemical mutagenesis
chromosome
chronological
classical genetic marker
codon-based selection test
colonist
complex trait
contamination
contemporary ancestor
Crime Scene Sample
Darwinian medicine
database
directional mating
directional selection
directionality
disease
Disease Alleles
disease association
disease heritage
disease outcome
DNA
DNA Database
DNA Evidence
DNA fingerprinting
DNA Profile
DNA Sample
domesticated animal
domesticated plant
dominant
driven evolution
Duffy blood group locus
ecological footprint
Effective Population Size
environment
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
ethics
European Roma
evolution
evolutionary disease analysis
evolutionary heritage
exon shuffling
farming dispersal
fossil evidence
founder effect
gene
gene duplication
gene expression
gene tree
genera
genetic background
genetic disease
genetic diversity
Genetic Drift
genetic imprint
genetic variation
genetics
genome sequence
genomewide association
genomics
genotype
germ-line mutation
gorilla-chimpanzee-human trichotomy
great ape
Great Apes
haplotype
hominid-hominim
hominoid divergence
human
human classification
Human Evolutionary Genetics
human origin
human speciation
humans as apes
hypervariable
inheritance
intraspecific diversity
isolated population
karyotype
lactase haplotype
lactose-tolerance test
likelihood ratio test
linguistic evidence
linguistics
linkage analysis
male-driven evolution
mammal
megafauna
meiosis
melanocyte
microcomplement fixation assay
microsatellite
Microsatellite Haplotype
mitochondrial DNA
mitochondrial Eve
mitosis
mixed ancestry
Modern Humans
molecular biology
molecular clock hypothesis
molecular ecology
molecular genetics
molecular genomics
molecular phylogenetics
Mutation Rate
natural selection
Negative Selection
Neolithic demic diffusion
nested cladistic analysis
nonallelic homologous recombination
noncoding DNA
nonpaternity
nonrecombining
nucleotide diversity
out of Africa
outcomes of agriculture
Pacific Islander
paleoclimatology
palimpsest metaphor
paternity
Paternity Index
pedigree analysis
pharmacogenetics
phenotype
phylogeny
physical mutagenesis
pigmentation
population
population genetics
population split
primate
regulation
Remote Oceania
satellite
sea level change
sex specific
sex testing
sex-biased admixture
sexual selection
shared evolutionary history
short tandem repeat
simple genetic disease
SNP Chip
somatic mutation
spatial autocorrelation
stone tool
techniques
thrifty genotype
TMRCA
transnational isolate
UCSC Genome Browser
UK biobank
variable number of tandem repeats
Wright Fisher Model
YRI

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815341482
  • Weight: 2020g
  • Dimensions: 213 x 276mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Jun 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Now in full-color, the Second Edition of Human Evolutionary Genetics has been completely revised to cover the rapid advances in the field since publication of the highly regarded First Edition. Written for upper-level undergraduate and graduate students, it is the only textbook to integrate genetic, archaeological, and linguistic perspectives on human evolution, and to offer a genomic perspective, reflecting the shift from studies of specific regions of the genome towards comprehensive genomewide analyses of human genetic diversity.

Human Evolutionary Genetics is suitable for courses in Genetics, Evolution, and Anthropology. Those readers with a background in anthropology will find that the streamlined genetic analysis material contained in the Second Edition is more accessible. The new edition also integrates new technologies (including next-generation sequencing and genome-wide SNP typing) and new data analysis methods, including recent data on ancient genomes and their impact on our understanding of human evolution. The book also examines the subject of personal genomics and its implications.

Mark Jobling is a Professor in the Department of Genetics at the University of Leicester, UK. Following a BA in Biochemistry and a DPhil in Genetics from the University of Oxford, he came to Leicester as an MRC Training Fellow in 1992, and has held a Wellcome Trust Senior Fellowship in Basic Biomedical Science since 1999. His research is in the area of human genetic diversity and the forces that pattern it, from mutation processes to cultural factors in human populations. He has a long-term interest in the Y chromosome and its many peculiarities.

Ed Hollox is a Lecturer in the Department of Genetics at the University of Leicester, UK. Following a BA in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge and PhD in Genetics from University College London, he spent several years as a postdoc at the University of Nottingham before taking up his current post in 2006. His research interest is the natural genetic diversity of humans and other mammals, in particular the structural variation of genomes.

Matthew Hurles is a Senior Group Leader in Human Genetics at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Hinxton, UK. Following a BA in Biochemistry from the University of Oxford, he received his PhD in Genetics from the University of Leicester, and established his group at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in 2003. His research interests are in medical and population genetics, with a long term interest in mutation processes and a current focus on the application of genome sequencing to the diagnosis of rare genetic disorders.

Toomas Kivisild is a Reader in the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge, UK. He received his PhD from University of Tartu, Estonia, and his earlier research focused on mitochondrial DNA variation in human populations. His current research interests are in human evolution and evolutionary population genetics, with a particular focus on questions relating global genetic population structure with evolutionary processes such as selection, drift, migrations and admixture.

Chris Tyler-Smith heads the Human Evolution team at The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Hinxton, UK. He studied Biochemistry at the University of Oxford and received a PhD form the University of Edinburgh. His research interests include genetic variation in humans and gorillas, and the insights these provide into our evolutionary histories and disease susceptibilities.