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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative dermatoglyphics and population structure in Northwest India.

TLDR
The pattern of external gene flow as inferred through R‐matrix analysis is consistent with the breeding and population structure of the groups, although genetic markers portray a relatively more realistic picture.
Abstract
The nature and extent of dermatoglyphic variation in northwest India is examined with the help of 28 quantitative variables-20 finger ridge counts and 8 palmar pattern ridge counts-among 12 endogamous populations. These populations represent the entire spectrum of ethnic and socioeconomic variation of the region and are presently distributed in three different states-Rajasthan, Punjab, and Himachal Pradesh. Of a total sample of 1,160 adult males, about 100 from each group were considered. Multiple discriminant analysis and R-matrix analysis were used to derive population relationships and patterns of external gene flow, respectively. Published data on genetic markers were reanalyzed to make the comparative evaluation of the patterns with reference to dermatoglyphs. Both the discriminant analysis and the F(ST) from R-matrix analysis suggest highly significant discrimination among the northwestern groups, whether one uses only 20 finger ridge count variables or all 28 variables, including the 8 palmar pattern ridge counts. The 8 palmar variables add very little to the variation explained by the 20 finger ridge count variables. F(ST) values suggest that the populations of Punjab are most homogeneous and those of Himachal Pradesh most heterogeneous. However, the levels of differentiation are similar for dermatoglyphs and genetic markers. The pattern of external gene flow as inferred through R-matrix analysis is consistent with the breeding and population structure of the groups, although genetic markers portray a relatively more realistic picture. Overall, the patterns of variation observed in dermatoglyphs and genetic markers are consistent with different dimensions of population structure; whereas dermatoglyphs conform more to the geographic pattern and less to ethnic resemblance, the reverse is true in the case of genetic markers. Am. J. Hum. Biol. 12:315-326, 2000. Copyright 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A study of sex differences in fingerprint ridge density in a North Indian young adult population.

TL;DR: The present study suggests that the fingerprint ridge density can be a relevant and useful morphological parameter in distinguishing sex of a latent fingerprint of unknown origin from the scene of crime.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex, Ancestral, and pattern type variation of fingerprint minutiae: A forensic perspective on anthropological dermatoglyphics

TL;DR: Significant minutiae variation between ancestral groups yields information that is valuable in both a forensic and anthropological setting, and Logistic regression results suggest that total bifurcations can predict the ancestry of an individual.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex differences in fingerprint ridge density in a Turkish young adult population: A sample of Baskent University

TL;DR: In this article, the ridge density was found to be significantly higher in women in every region studied and in all fingers when compared to men, and the fingerprint ridge density in the ulnar and radial areas of the fingerprints was significantly greater than the lower area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Topological variability and sex differences in fingerprint ridge density in a sample of the Sudanese population.

TL;DR: Fingerprints found in forensic examinations/crime scenes can be useful to determine sex of Sudanese individuals based on fingerprint ridge density; furthermore, ridge density can be considered a morphological trait for individual variation in forensic anthropology.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of palmar dermatoglyphics in two ethnic Indian populations of north Bengal, India.

TL;DR: The present investigation further highlights the racial affinity, sex, and bilateral differences among Rajbanshi individuals using dermatoglyphic palmar variables, which appear to be limited only to ethnic identification, not personal identification.
References
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Journal Article

Detection of differential gene flow from patterns of quantitative variation.

TL;DR: The Harpending-Ward model is extended to quantitative traits using an equal and additive effects model of inheritance and new methods for estimation of the genetic relationship matrix (R) from quantitative traits are developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The genetic structure of a tribal population, the Yanomama Indians

TL;DR: In this article, the authors initiated a major program to collect data on the breeding structure of human populations, focusing on the surviving relatively unacculturated, tribal-type populations.
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The people of India

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