Opinion
Recommendations for utilizing and reporting population genetic analyses: the reproducibility of genetic clustering using the program structure

Article first published online: 24 SEP 2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2012.05754.x
© 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Additional Information
How to Cite
Gilbert, K. J., Andrew, R. L., Bock, D. G., Franklin, M. T., Kane, N. C., Moore, J.-S., Moyers, B. T., Renaut, S., Rennison, D. J., Veen, T. and Vines, T. H. (2012), Recommendations for utilizing and reporting population genetic analyses: the reproducibility of genetic clustering using the program structure. Molecular Ecology, 21: 4925–4930. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2012.05754.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 11 OCT 2012
- Article first published online: 24 SEP 2012
- Manuscript Accepted: 24 JUL 2012
- Manuscript Revised: 18 JUL 2012
- Manuscript Received: 15 MAY 2012
Corrigendum: Corrigendum
Vol. 22, Issue 8, 2357, Article first published online: 4 FEB 2013
Keywords:
- population clustering;
- population genetics;
- reproducibility;
- structure
Abstract
Reproducibility is the benchmark for results and conclusions drawn from scientific studies, but systematic studies on the reproducibility of scientific results are surprisingly rare. Moreover, many modern statistical methods make use of ‘random walk’ model fitting procedures, and these are inherently stochastic in their output. Does the combination of these statistical procedures and current standards of data archiving and method reporting permit the reproduction of the authors' results? To test this, we reanalysed data sets gathered from papers using the software package structure to identify genetically similar clusters of individuals. We find that reproducing structure results can be difficult despite the straightforward requirements of the program. Our results indicate that 30% of analyses were unable to reproduce the same number of population clusters. To improve this, we make recommendations for future use of the software and for reporting structure analyses and results in published works.

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