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S. Hong Lee

Researcher at University of South Australia

Publications -  49
Citations -  20042

S. Hong Lee is an academic researcher from University of South Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome-wide association study & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 40 publications receiving 16426 citations. Previous affiliations of S. Hong Lee include University of New England (Australia) & QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute.

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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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GCTA: a tool for genome-wide complex trait analysis.

TL;DR: The GCTA software is a versatile tool to estimate and partition complex trait variation with large GWAS data sets and focuses on the function of estimating the variance explained by all the SNPs on the X chromosome and testing the hypotheses of dosage compensation.
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Genetic relationship between five psychiatric disorders estimated from genome-wide SNPs

S. Hong Lee, +405 more
- 01 Sep 2013 - 
TL;DR: Empirical evidence of shared genetic etiology for psychiatric disorders can inform nosology and encourages the investigation of common pathophysiologies for related disorders.
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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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Psychiatric genome-wide association study analyses implicate neuronal, immune and histone pathways

Colm O'Dushlaine, +404 more
- 19 Jan 2015 - 
TL;DR: It is indicated that risk variants for psychiatric disorders aggregate in particular biological pathways and that these pathways are frequently shared between disorders.