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Revisiting the Out of Africa event with a novel Deep Learning approach

Authors :
Burak Yelmen
Mayukh Mondal
Vasili Pankratov
Luca Pagani
Francesco Montinaro
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Anatomically modern humans evolved around 300 thousand years ago in Africa1. Modern humans started to appear in the fossil record outside of Africa about 100 thousand years ago though other hominins existed throughout Eurasia much earlier2–4. Recently, several researchers argued in favour of a single out of Africa event for modern humans based on whole-genome sequences analyses5–7. However, the single out of Africa model is in contrast with some of the findings from fossil records, which supports two out of Africa8,9, and uniparental data, which proposes back to Africa movement10,11. Here, we used a novel deep learning approach coupled with Approximate Bayesian Computation and Sequential Monte Carlo to revisit these hypotheses from the whole genome sequence perspective. Our results support the back to Africa model over other alternatives. We estimated that there are two successive splits between Africa and out of African populations happening around 60-80 thousand years ago and separated by 12-13 thousand years. One of the populations resulting from the more recent split has to a large extent replaced the older West African population while the other one has founded the out of Africa populations.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........051470ffe6083eb4b0c10201f681f4e6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.12.10.419069