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Ariel Darvasi

Researcher at Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Publications -  120
Citations -  22483

Ariel Darvasi is an academic researcher from Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Quantitative trait locus. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 119 publications receiving 19833 citations. Previous affiliations of Ariel Darvasi include Paris Descartes University & Columbia University.

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Biological insights from 108 schizophrenia-associated genetic loci

Stephan Ripke, +354 more
- 24 Jul 2014 - 
TL;DR: Associations at DRD2 and several genes involved in glutamatergic neurotransmission highlight molecules of known and potential therapeutic relevance to schizophrenia, and are consistent with leading pathophysiological hypotheses.
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Modeling Linkage Disequilibrium Increases Accuracy of Polygenic Risk Scores

Bjarni J. Vilhjálmsson, +394 more
TL;DR: LDpred is introduced, a method that infers the posterior mean effect size of each marker by using a prior on effect sizes and LD information from an external reference panel, and outperforms the approach of pruning followed by thresholding, particularly at large sample sizes.
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Identification of loci associated with schizophrenia by genome-wide association and follow-up

TL;DR: Meta-analysis provided strongest evidence for association around ZNF804A and this strengthened when the affected phenotype including bipolar disorder included bipolar disorder and the overall pattern of replication was unlikely to occur by chance.
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The Collaborative Cross, a community resource for the genetic analysis of complex traits

Gary A. Churchill, +113 more
- 01 Nov 2004 - 
TL;DR: The Collaborative Cross will provide a common reference panel specifically designed for the integrative analysis of complex systems and will change the way the authors approach human health and disease.
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Contribution of copy number variants to schizophrenia from a genome-wide study of 41,321 subjects

Christian R. Marshall, +329 more
- 01 Jan 2017 - 
TL;DR: In this article, a centralized analysis pipeline was applied to a SCZ cohort of 21,094 cases and 20,227 controls, and a global enrichment of copy number variants (CNVs) was observed in cases (odds ratio (OR) = 1.11, P = 5.7 × 10-15), which persisted after excluding loci implicated in previous studies.