Greetings
Following an interesting discussion on biostar here there are 2 views given whereby the allele frequency of a SNP is classed as between chromosomes and and the other is that the allele frequency of a SNP is classed as between individuals.
I personally thought the allele frequency was between individuals (e.g. a homozygous SNP counts as one occurence in the population and not two). I thought this was an interesting point and I was hoping for a resolution as I doubted many members of this forum would have spotted it on the tail-end of another question.
Yet again the definition of snp rears its ugly head.
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Edit: It seems I didn't word my question right. If the classical definition of a SNP is that is occurs in 1% of the population, does that mean that it occurs in 1% of the individuals in the population or 1% of the chromosomes in the population (i.e. the # of individuals x 2, assuming diploidy)
The answers below are all clear: it is 1% of the total chromosomes. Just forget individuals. Frequency is never defined that way.
The answers below are clear: it is 1% of the total number of chromosomes. Allele (SNP) frequency is never defined based on individuals.
Reply to "edit": the answers below are clear: it is 1% of the total number of chromosomes. Allele (SNP) frequency is never defined based on individuals.
okie dokie, karaoke. thanks