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Measures of Synteny Conservation Between Species Pairs
Elizabeth Ann Houswortha and John Postlethwaitba Mathematics Department, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403
b Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403
Corresponding author: Elizabeth Ann Housworth, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405., ehouswor{at}indiana.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: G. A. CHURCHILL
and call syntenic correlation, designed to measure the amount of synteny conservation between two species. This measure allows syntenic conservation to be compared across many pairs of species. We improve the previous methods for estimating the true number of conserved syntenies given the observed number of conserved syntenies by taking into account the dependency of the numbers of orthologues observed in the chromosome pairings between the two species and by determining both point and interval estimators. We also discuss the application of our methods to genomes that contain chromosomes of highly variable lengths and to estimators of the true number of conserved segments between species pairs.
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