BIOL 522 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Effective Population Size, Idealised Population, Allele Frequency

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Wright-fisher model in neutral haploid asexual one-population version. Generation t has n individuals in this population version. For each individual in generation t+1, pick someone random in generation t to copy from. If you want mutation in model, when you copy someone from generation t you make an imperfect copy/ changes occur. Each generation is created by random sampling from generation before. Genetic drift occurs when you do this kind of sampling from previous generation. Some individuals get sampled, some don"t get sampled - over time allele frequencies will vary (at 0 -> lost/ won"t come back or sudden increase and peaks) New mutations come in near bottom, most new mutations get lost quickly because alleles wobble. Alleles get fixed (goes to 100% frequency) or lost (0% frequency) Only variable in model is n to explain how wandering happens -

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