Originally posted by vinnie
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That entry by Khan and Hu seems more like a "backgrounder" rather than an entry intended for average FTDNA customer, to answer specific questions. Few laymen will be able to follow all the references.
I am still cringing over the population descriptions, though the Khan and Hu descriptions are somewhat different than those which finally made it onto the MyOrigins page.
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Originally posted by Ann Turner View PostThe Hardy-Weinburg Equilbrium (H-WE) assumption is that the allele frequencies seen in the reference populations today reflect the allele frequencies from some (unspecified) time in the past.
Allele frequencies can change over time for a variety of reasons, including random drift, but in a large population, the changes will be small.
Allele frequencies can also change with migration of a new population into the existing population.
The populations with a small number of samples are actually more likely to violate the H-WE assumption. I suspect the reason for small sample sizes is very mundane: they didn't have much to choose from.
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