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Financial Assistance (Stanford)
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Human Genome
Diversity Project
The Human Genome Diversity Project is an international project that seeks to understand the diversity and unity of the entire human species. Laboratories from around the world have contributed cell lines from populations that they have studied to a resource known as the HGDP-CEPH Collection in Paris, France. These cell lines are maintained at the Centre Etude Polymorphism Humain. These samples have all met the criteria set by the HGDP Ethics Committee. DNA from these cells is available to nonprofit research laboratories essentially at cost. For more details on the collection, see H. Cann et al, "A Human Genome Diversity Cell Line Panel," Science, 12 April 2002, 296: 261-262 (12 April 2002) and its Supplemental Data; Rosenberg et al, "Genetic Structure of Human Populations," Science 20 December 2002, 298: 2381-2385; and Rosenberg et al, "Clines, Clusters, and the Effect of Study Design on the Inference of Human Population Structure, PLoS Genetics December 2005, 1:6, 0660-0671.
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