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Richard R. Hudson, Ph.D.
Professor
Department of Ecology and Evolution Committee on Evolutionary Biology
Biological Sciences Collegiate Division
Office: Zoology 302A | Phone: 773-834-2978 | Fax: 773-702-9740 | email:rr-hudson(at)uchicago(dot)edu
Subjects: Population genetics, theory and data analysis with a focus on molecular variation within and between species.
Hudson Lab |
Research Interests
My research concerns primarily the analysis and interpretation of
molecular variation within and between populations. The goal is to
understand the evolutionary forces that have produced the observed
patterns of variation within populations and between species. My work
is entirely theoretical, focusing on the stochastic processes relevant
to evolution in finite populations in which genetic drift, mutation,
migration and selection may all be important. Monte Carlo computer
simulations and methods of statistical inference are important aspects
of the work. Much of my past work has focused on Drosophila data, in
the future it is likely that human variation will be a major focus.
Recent Publications
Kaplan, N.L., Hudson, R. R. and Iizuka, M. 1991 The coalescent process in models with selection, recombination and geographic subdivision. Genetical Research 57:83-91.
Slatkin, M. and Hudson, R. R. 1991 Pairwise comparisons of mitochondrial DNA sequences ins stable and exponentially growing populations. Genetics
Hudson, R. R., Bailey, K., Skarecky, D.,
Kwiatowski, J., and Ayala, F. J. 1994 Evidence for positive selection
in the superoxide dismutase (Sod) region of Drosophila melanogaster. Genetics 136:1329-1340
Hudson, R. R. and Kaplan, N.L. 1995 Deletorious background selection with recombination. Genetics 141:1605-1617
Hudson, R.R. 1998 Island models and the coalescent process. J. Molecular Ecology: 7:413-418
Rich, S.M., Licht, M.C., Hudson, R.R.,
and Ayala, F.J. 1998 Malaria’s Eve: Evidence of a recent population
bottleneck throughout the world populations of Plasmodium falciparum. Proc. Natl. Acal. Sci. (USA) 95:4425-4430 |
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