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Supposedly something called the "Biology of Genomes titles" has been announced and includes a couple of subjects such as:
- Population structure in African-Americans
- Contrasting patterns in the high-resolution variation of uniparental markers in European populations highlight very recent male-specific expansions
- Is Sanger sequencing still a gold standard?
- The time and place of European gene flow into Ashkenazi Jews
- 65,222 whole genome haplotypes from the Haplotype Reference Consortium and efficient algorithms to use them
- The expansion of human populations out of Africa might have led to the progressive build-up of a recessive mutation load
- An early modern human with a recent Neandertal ancestor
- Great ape Y chromosome diversity reflects social structure and sex-biased behaviours
- Theoretical analysis indicates human genome is not a blueprint but a storage of genes, and human oocytes have an instruction
- Modeling population size changes leads to accurate inference of sex-biased demographic events
- Exploring population structure through large pedigrees
- Better, faster, stronger—Mixed models and PCA in the year 2015
- Denisovan ancestry in East Eurasian and Native American populations
- Measuring the rate and heritability of aging in Sardinians using pattern recognition
- Dog diversity is shaped by a Central Asian origin followed by geographical isolation and admixture
- Comparative analysis of the Y chromosome genomes of greater apes
- Genomic analysis of ‘Paleoamerican relicts’ reveals close ancestry with Native Americans
- Analysis of genetic history of Siberian and Northeastern European populations
Is this something new or rather a review of studies already published?