On Negative Heritability and Negative Estimates of Heritability
David Steinsaltz, Andy Dahl, Kenneth W. Wachter
Abstract
We consider the problem of interpreting negative maximum likelihood estimates of heritability that sometimes arise from popular statistical models of additive genetic variation. These may result from random noise acting on estimates of genuinely positive heritability, but we argue that they may also arise from misspecification of the standard additive mechanism that is supposed to justify the statistical procedure. Researchers should be open to the possibility that negative heritability estimates could reflect a real physical feature of the biological process from which the data were sampled.
Topics & Concepts
HeritabilityBiologyMissing heritability problemVariation (astronomy)StatisticsGeneticsEconometricsEvolutionary biologyMathematicsGenetic variantsGeneGenotypePhysicsAstrophysicsGenetic Associations and EpidemiologyGenetic Mapping and Diversity in Plants and AnimalsGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestock