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Ahmed Rebai

Researcher at University of Sfax

Publications -  273
Citations -  5661

Ahmed Rebai is an academic researcher from University of Sfax. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Single-nucleotide polymorphism. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 258 publications receiving 4947 citations. Previous affiliations of Ahmed Rebai include SIDI & École Normale Supérieure.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Constructing Confidence Intervals for Qtl Location

TL;DR: It is shown that the confidence interval built with this likelihood ratio test has the correct probability of containing the true map location of the QTL, for almost all QTLs, whereas the classical confidence interval can be very biased forQTLs having small effect.
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Approximate thresholds of interval mapping tests for QTL detection.

TL;DR: The approach presented here could be used to obtain, after suitable calculations, thresholds for most segregating populations used in QTL mapping experiments and is useful for any situation.
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Detection of Chemlali Extra-Virgin Olive Oil Adulteration Mixed with Soybean Oil, Corn Oil, and Sunflower Oil by Using GC and HPLC

TL;DR: Fatty acid composition as an indicator of purity suggests that linolenic acid content could be used as a parameter for the detection of extra/virgin olive oil fraud with 5% of soybean oil.
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SSR-based genetic diversity assessment among Tunisian winter barley and relationship with morphological traits

TL;DR: The results show the large genetic diversity of the Tunisian barleycultivars and the association of this diversity with adaptation traits and the correlation between both diversity measures was highly significant and the clustering based on SSR and morphological data was relatively good.
Posted ContentDOI

A year of genomic surveillance reveals how the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic unfolded in Africa.

Eduan Wilkinson, +326 more
- 09 Sep 2021 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the genomic epidemiology using a dataset of 8746 genomes from 33 African countries and two overseas territories and show that the epidemics in most countries were initiated by importations predominantly from Europe, which diminished following the early introduction of international travel restrictions.