Multi-locus match probability in a finite population: a fundamental difference between the Moran and Wright-Fisher models

Published: 2009, Last Modified: 06 Nov 2025Bioinform. 2009EveryoneRevisionsBibTeXCC BY-SA 4.0
Abstract: : A fundamental problem in population genetics, which being also of importance to forensic science, is to compute the match probability (MP) that two individuals randomly chosen from a population have identical alleles at a collection of loci. At present, 11–13 unlinked autosomal microsatellite loci are typed for forensic use. In a finite population, the genealogical relationships of individuals can create statistical non-independence of alleles at unlinked loci. However, the so-called product rule, which is used in courts in the USA, computes the MP for multiple unlinked loci by assuming statistical independence, multiplying the one-locus MPs at those loci. Analytically testing the accuracy of the product rule for more than five loci has hitherto remained an open problem.
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