Your best bet for a newsgroup is: bionet.molbio.gene-linkage. While the
title has "linkage" in it, the people who read & reply to it are usually
well-versed in a variety of different statistical genetic approaches to
analysis of genetic data. The signal:noise ratio is very low (as are
total postings), and postings are generally both useful and legitimate.
You have to be willing to wait a bit, however, to get a reply. If you
have none in a week or so, probably there isn't a good answer.
************************************************************************
Ellen M. Wijsman COURIER DELIVERY ADDRESS ONLY:
Research Professor Ellen M. Wijsman
Div. of Medical Genetics and 1914 N 34th St., suite 209
Dept. Biostatistics Seattle, WA 98103
BOX 357720, University of Washington (Note: Use this address
Seattle, WA 98195-7720 EXACTLY as given above, and
phone: (206) 543-8987 use ONLY for courier delivery!!!)
fax: (206) 616-1973 email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
web page: http://www.biostat.washington.edu/biostat/faculty/ewijsman
*************************************************************************
On Wed, 11 Apr 2001, James Cui wrote:
> Dear members:
>
> I am wondering
>
> (1) if there is genetic statistics or genetic epidemiology discussion group
> exist;
>
> (2) I am going to analyse data from twins observed in two time periods (and
> at the baseline), to study whether there is genetic contribution to a
> continuous trait response to the change of putative risk factors in these
> two time periods. Does anyone has suggestions about the appropriate
> statistical analysis methods?
>
> Thanks,
>
> James.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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