Combination of Genetic and Humanitarian (Cross-Cultural) Methods for the Identification of Human Genes Involved in the Process of Adaptation to Evolutionary New Environmental Factors
Russian Journal of Genetics • Vol/Iss. 51(4) • Pleiades Publishing. • • Published In • Pages: 397-407 •
By Borinskaya, S. A., Yankovsky, N. K.
Hypothesis
There is no correlation between the frequency of the LCT*-13910T allele and populations for which cattle breeding is common (401).
Note
While the researcher's hypothesis was that there was no positive relationship between the two, they still tested for a positive correlation. A final p value of 0.764 supported the original hypothesis.
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Spearman Rho Test | Supported | p = 0.764 | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Cattle breeding | Independent | Pastoral Activities |
Lactase gene (LCT*-13910T allele) frequency | Dependent | Genetics, Physiological Data |