Showing posts with label Jamboree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jamboree. Show all posts

Sunday, June 12, 2011

News from 23andMe and FTDNA at SCGS 2011 Jamboree

I attended the lectures of 23andMe's Joanna Mountain and FTDNA's Bennett Greenspan at SCGS 2011 Jamboree, as well as participated in the ISOGG meeting's panel discussion. Below are some interesting tidbits that I learned while there.

23andMe News and Tidbits: 
23andMe recognizes Relative Finder as the company's most engaging feature. This is good news for customers interested in Ancestry tools. In the coming weeks at 23andMe, Relative Finder will undergo the following key improvements:
1.  23andMe will be launching a new interface for Relative Finder. It will display the birthplaces, current locations and ancestral locations (if provided) of anonymous matches. (I am told that I will be a beta-tester, so I will post screenshots when/if that happens.)
2.  23andMe customers will be able to sort their matches by mtDNA and Y-DNA haplogroups, most likely by the end of the month.
3.  23andMe customers will be able to report confirmed relationships for their predicted matches.

23andMe just had a paper on their Parkinson's Disease research accepted for publication in PLoS Genetics. (No news on publication date yet.)

23andMe's total number* of individuals likely to self-identify as:
1000 African American
3500 Latino/Hispanic
5500 East Asian
3400 South Asian
4900 Southern European
6200 Ashkenazi Jewish
56,000 Northern European
1,000 First generation from two continents
*These numbers are as of April 2011 and, obviously, approximate. JM-"In general, these are non-overlapping sets, but there are some individuals who do not fall into any of these categories."

Slide presented on June 11 at SCGS  Jamboree 2011
Courtesy Katherine Borges

Joanna is "very optimistic" about the future of full sequencing for the Y-chromosome and expects it to happen "very soon", however 23andMe has no plans to offer a separate Y-chromosome sequencing product.

FTDNA News and Tidbits:
1.  The 2011 FTDNA DNA Administrator's Conference will be held November 5th and 6th in Houston.
2.  FTDNA has found previously undiscovered mutations in ~10% of all new Full Sequence mtDNA samples.
3.  FTDNA sold 200 "Walk the Y" tests during their last sale. So far they have completed 100 of these samples and found 140 new SNPs. The "Walk the Y" tests take five times more plate space than the Full Sequence mtDNA tests. As a result, FTDNA can run only two of these tests per day.
4.  FTDNA is still planning to allow uploads of 3rd party data to their Family Finder database. (Very soon!)
5.  FTDNA has shipped out over 207,000 kits since inception and 406,000 kits have been sold by National Geographic. FTDNA has 208,000 unique Y-DNA results and 128,703 unique mtDNA results in their database.
6.  FTDNA's Population Finder uses 64 reference populations.

I hope you learned something new. I know I did!
[Disclosure - My company StudioINTV has an existing production agreement with FTDNA that has no bearing on the opinions I express. I also receive a small commission from FTDNA on non-sale orders through my affiliate link, which I use to fund DNA tests. I receive no other compensation in relation to any of the companies or products referenced in my blog.]

Saturday, June 11, 2011

"Your Genetic Genealogist" at SCGS Jamboree 2011

My New DNA Necklace by Alice Fairhurst of SCGS
I have been asked to be on the discussion panel for the SCGS Jamboree 2011 ISOGG meeting today at 5:00 pm along with Bennett Greenspan, Katherine Borges, UCLA Professor John Richardson and Alice Fairhurst to talk a little about DNA testing and this blog. If you are attending Jamboree this year, please join us.

I spent most of the day yesterday at Jamboree at the joint ISOGG/SCGS DNA Special Interest Booth chatting about my favorite subject, DNA testing, with the nice genealogists in attendance. I was happy to see that FTDNA's Bennett Greenspan's lecture was added to the schedule yesterday afternoon, so I attended then instead of having to get up at the crack of dawn today to attend his 8:30am lecture. (I'm driving back and forth.) It's amazing- no matter how many times I hear Bennett talk, I still learn something new! After the exhibit hall closed, I stayed late to attend the Geneabloggers' ice cream social hosted by Geni and met a lot of my fellow geneabloggers. It was especially a pleasure to meet fellow genetic genealogist and blogger Joan Miller of Luxegen and, of course, Geneablogger's Thomas MacEntee.

I am looking forward to hearing 23andMe's Joanna Mountain's lecture today at 11:30 and I am hoping that there will be some interesting tidbits to share with you all.

Gotta get on the road now. Hope to see you there!