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At least in the Kircher data, there are SNPs where we know what effect a deletion has. In theory, we could use this, though the data may be somewhat biased (for instance, for HBG1 we have 85 of the 274 bases with a deletion measured).
Also, I should double check that I'm not counting these in the possible up, down, and neutral mutations, since at the moment I don't count them in the actual up, down, and neutral.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
At least in the Kircher data, there are SNPs where we know what effect a deletion has. In theory, we could use this, though the data may be somewhat biased (for instance, for HBG1 we have 85 of the 274 bases with a deletion measured).
Also, I should double check that I'm not counting these in the possible up, down, and neutral mutations, since at the moment I don't count them in the actual up, down, and neutral.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: