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Tajima's D is a population genetic test statistic created by and named after the Japanese researcher Fumio Tajima. [1] Tajima's D is computed as the difference between two measures of genetic diversity: the mean number of pairwise differences and the number of segregating sites, each scaled so that they are expected to be the same in a neutrally evolving population of constant size.
Fumio Tajima was born in Ōkawa, in Japan's Fukuoka prefecture, in 1951. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He graduated from high school in 1970, completed his undergraduate degree at Kyushu University in 1976, and received a Master's degree from the same institution in 1978. [ 3 ]
Tajima's D is based on the expectation that S = theta * x where x is the sum of 1/i for i from 1 to N. Thus, we turn this into a method to estimate theta by noting that theta = E(S)/x. The current version suggests that S/x part is a "normalized" version of segregating sites, and this leads to a mistake in the calculation of D in the example.
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David Grier Martin Jr. (born May 24, 1940) is an American retired lawyer, politician, and university administrator. Martin was a candidate for the United States House of Representatives in 1984 and 1986, losing to Alex McMillan .
The James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal, formerly known as the Pope Center for Higher Education Policy and simply the Pope Center, is an American conservative 501(c)(3) nonprofit [2] higher education policy institute located in Raleigh, North Carolina.
George Coleman Martin (May 16, 1910, Everett, Washington - May 21, 2003) was a project engineer on the Boeing B-47 and chief project engineer of the Boeing B-52. [1]
The paper was originally titled "The Eastern Reflector", and was founded in 1882 by David Jordan and Julian Whichard. They founded the paper in a part of their mothers' school house with equipment they bought from another paper they had worked for, The Greenville Express. It became known and published daily as The Reflector on Dec. 10, 1894.