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locusbased

Locusbased is a term used in genetics and computational genomics to describe approaches, analyses, or data representations that focus on individual genetic loci—specific positions in the genome—rather than evaluating patterns across the entire genome. The concept centers on locus-level inference, often defined by fixed genomic coordinates or functional boundaries, and is employed in tasks such as fine-mapping, regional association studies, and locus-specific heritability estimation.

In practice, locusbased methods test or estimate associations within predefined loci or LD blocks, integrating information

Compared with genome-wide approaches like GWAS, locusbased analyses aim for precise localization of signals within targeted

Limitations of locusbased methods include potential under-detection of distributed, polygenic effects that span multiple loci and

See also: fine-mapping, regional association study, LD blocks, gene-based tests, functional annotation.

about
linkage
disequilibrium,
recombination,
and
functional
annotations
to
prioritize
potentially
causal
variants.
This
local
focus
can
complement
genome-wide
strategies
by
providing
higher-resolution
localization
within
regions
already
implicated
by
broader
scans.
regions,
facilitating
biological
interpretation
and
downstream
experimental
validation.
They
are
commonly
used
in
post-GWAS
workflows
to
dissect
regional
signals,
assess
the
contribution
of
a
single
locus
to
trait
variance,
and
refine
candidate
variants
for
functional
studies.
the
dependence
on
how
loci
are
defined,
which
can
influence
results.
Methodological
variations
exist
in
how
loci
are
delineated,
how
LD
is
modeled,
and
how
functional
data
are
integrated.