These news items have the newest ones last.
About the course text:
The course text (as a PDF), Theoretical Evolutionary Genetics by Joe
Felsenstein.
(An early 2015 version is the one currently available there. Some corrections
will be made in a few days but it is almost at the 2015 version.)
This course text will also be reproduced locally and sold to students
at cost (at a cost of about $27, I said here, but it turned out to be $42). Students who want new printed copies should commit at the
second class session to
buy them. If you can't make the second class session and want to be signed up
to buy the text, email me.
Lecture materials (audio recordings, etc.)
The derivations will mostly be done on the whiteboard, not on lecture
projections (with a few exceptions, mostly of figures from tbe course
text). The derivations are shown step-by-step in the text.
For the use of people who cannot make it to a lecture, WMA and MP3 audio files
of the lectures will be linked here (as they are given). You should be able
to use these together with the appropriate pages of the book to get some
sense of what was done in the lecture. The files are recorded at medium
quality, and are about 9 Mb in size. Their names indicate the date:
the files for the lecture for January 5, 2017 will be called 20170105.WMA
and 20170105.mp3. As the recordings are made and posted here these names
will become links to the files.
... and here are the projections from the course, as PDFs:
From upper campus, come across the
pedestrian bridge (over Pacific Avenue) next to Kincaid Hall (the bridge
nearest 15th avenue). At the south end of the bridge, descend the stairs
one level, then turn right and walk back to the street. Go left
along the sidewalk unto you reach 15th avenue at the corner. You can reach
Foege South by going left on 15th avenue.
Alternatively, you can reach this point by coming down 15th avenue and across
Pacific Street.
Foege (“FAY-gee”) Building is on your left. Proceed to
the downhill half, turn left on the walkway between the North and South parts
of Foege Building.
Enter it at the door which is on the right side of that sidewalk after
you pass under the connection between these two parts of Foege Building.
S110 is the first room on your left as you go along this 1st
floor corridor.
Here is a campus map showing the
location. Unfortunately the campus maps system puts on the map a big box showing a
photo of the building, which manages to obscure all the stuff nearby and thus probably
confuse everyone as to where the building is. Notice where the little pointer tip is
below that box, then use the X button to dismiss that irritating box.
Oh yes, and who is the building named after? Someone living:
This guy. Not bad!
GENOME 562
Population Genetics
What are some other related courses?
The UW has great strength is evolutionary genetics and statistical genetics.
Some relevant courses are:
Some faculty members in this area (evolutionary
genetics) are
There are many:
Blogs
There are blogs, many involved in creation / evolution debating, and some Usenet
newsgroups (which I have not listed here as they have become mostly
inactive).
I do not have enough understanding of Facebook to know what is available there.
Some brief descriptions of some of the major ones covering evolution:
Web Pages
Computer simulations of population genetics
Electronic journals
* On 18 January recordings cut off 10 minutes before the end
of the lecture,Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week4 Week 5
20170104.WMA
20170104.mp3
20170106.WMA
20170106.mp3
20170109.WMA
20170109.mp3
20170111.WMA
20170111.mp3
20170113.WMA
20170113.mp3
(Holiday, so
no class)
20170118.WMA *
20170118.mp3 *
20170120.WMA
20170120.mp3
20170123.WMA
20170123.mp3
20170125.WMA
20170125.mp3
20170127.WMA
20170127.mp3
20170130.WMA
20170130.mp3
20170201.WMA
20170201.mp3
(not recorded) **
(not recorded) **
Week 6 Week 7 Week 8 Week9 Week 10
(snowstorm, so
class cancelled)
20170208.WMA
20170208.mp3
20170210.WMA
20170210.mp3
20170213.WMA
20170213.mp3
20170215.WMA
20170215.mp3
20170217.WMA
20170217.mp3
(Holiday, so
no class)
20170222.WMA
20170222.mp3
20170224.WMA
20170224.mp3
20170227.WMA
20170227.mp3
20170301.WMA
20170301.mp3
20170303.WMA
20170303.mp3
20170306.WMA
20170306.mp3
20170308.WMA
20170308.mp3
20170310.WMA
20170310.mp3
as a result of running out of memory on the
recorder.
** On 3 February the lecture was not recorded, owing
to a brain
malfunction on the part of the lecturer.
Where is the lecture room?
Description from the UW Course Catalog
Credits: 4
Quarters: Sp
Instructor: Felsenstein
Course Desc.: Mathematical and experimental approaches to the genetics
of natural populations, especially as they relate to evolution.
Emphasis on theoretical population genetics.
Prerequisite: permission of instructor. Offered: Sp.
Note: below this point the material is from the 2013 course web page and has not yet been
revised.
What are some Internet resources on evolutionary biology?
There are quite a few more. Search using a search engine with the
phrase “Population genetics simulation”
There is of course, the professional literature in evolutionary biology. Some of these journals (links given below) are available in electronic versions for UW people. If these links don't give you access you should use the Electronic Journals links in the University Library site, and type in the name of the journal. If you are at another institution, you may be able to access a different run of years of each journal. Here are some direct UW links to the leading journals covering evolution:
Where can I get a copy of the genetic simulation program?
The program is freely distributable.
It is available from my server. There you will
find source code, documentation and executables for Windows, Mac OS X, and
Unix workstations:
To fetch any of these
Click here.
It will show a page which then allows you to download the program.
this page maintained fitfully by Joe Felsenstein