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Main Authors: Kooakachai, Monchai, Chapalee, Tiwakorn, Thitiyan, Chairat, Jumnongwut, Patsaya
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.05490
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author Kooakachai, Monchai
Chapalee, Tiwakorn
Thitiyan, Chairat
Jumnongwut, Patsaya
author_facet Kooakachai, Monchai
Chapalee, Tiwakorn
Thitiyan, Chairat
Jumnongwut, Patsaya
contents DNA databases are widely used in forensic science to identify unknown offenders. When no exact match is found, familial DNA searches can help by identifying first-degree relatives using likelihood ratios. If multiple subpopulations are relevant, likelihood ratios can be computed separately based on allele frequency estimates. Various strategies exist to combine these ratios, such as averaging allele frequencies or taking the average, maximum, or minimum likelihood ratio. While some comparisons have been made in populations like those in the U.S., their effectiveness in other regions remains unclear. This study evaluates likelihood ratio-based strategies in Southeast Asian populations, specifically Thailand, Malaysia, and Singapore. Our findings align with previous research, showing that statistical power varies across strategies. Among Thai subpopulations, the minimum likelihood ratio strategy is preferred, as it maintains high power while minimizing differences between subpopulations.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_05490
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Consistency of Familial DNA Search Results in Southeast Asian Populations
Kooakachai, Monchai
Chapalee, Tiwakorn
Thitiyan, Chairat
Jumnongwut, Patsaya
Applications
92D20
DNA databases are widely used in forensic science to identify unknown offenders. When no exact match is found, familial DNA searches can help by identifying first-degree relatives using likelihood ratios. If multiple subpopulations are relevant, likelihood ratios can be computed separately based on allele frequency estimates. Various strategies exist to combine these ratios, such as averaging allele frequencies or taking the average, maximum, or minimum likelihood ratio. While some comparisons have been made in populations like those in the U.S., their effectiveness in other regions remains unclear. This study evaluates likelihood ratio-based strategies in Southeast Asian populations, specifically Thailand, Malaysia, and Singapore. Our findings align with previous research, showing that statistical power varies across strategies. Among Thai subpopulations, the minimum likelihood ratio strategy is preferred, as it maintains high power while minimizing differences between subpopulations.
title Consistency of Familial DNA Search Results in Southeast Asian Populations
topic Applications
92D20
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.05490