Testing Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium with a simple root-mean-square statistic
Methodology
2013-06-03 v3
Abstract
We provide evidence that a root-mean-square test of goodness-of-fit can be significantly more powerful than state-of-the-art exact tests in detecting deviations from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. Unlike Pearson's chi-square test, the log--likelihood-ratio test, and Fisher's exact test, which are sensitive to relative discrepancies between genotypic frequencies, the root-mean-square test is sensitive to absolute discrepancies. This can increase statistical power, as we demonstrate using benchmark datasets and through asymptotic analysis. With the aid of computers, exact P-values for the root-mean-square statistic can be calculated eeffortlessly, and can be easily implemented using the author's freely available code.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1210.7052,
title = {Testing Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium with a simple root-mean-square statistic},
author = {Rachel Ward and Raymond J. Carroll},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1210.7052},
year = {2013}
}
Comments
29 pages, 6 figures