Yale University

Biological and Biomedical Sciences

Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Yale School of Medicine

BBS Program
Yale University
P.O. Box 208084
New Haven, CT 06520-8084
Tel: 203.785.3735
Fax: 203.785.3734
bbs@yale.edu

Kenneth K. Kidd

 

Molecular Cell Biology, Genetics & Development; Neuroscience; Computational Biology & Bioinformatics

Professor of Genetics, Psychiatry, and Ecology & Evolutionary Biology

Education

B.A. University of Southern California 1965
Ph.D. University of Wisconsin 1969

Research Interests

The majority of the work in my laboratory is currently focused on human genome diversity: the patterns of normal genetic variation among four dozen populations (~2500 individuals) from around the world, the variation in those patterns along the genome, and the inference of recent human evolutionary processes. The research involves both molecular and biostatistical components. Because of longstanding interest in neuropsychiatric disorders that fail to show a Mendelian pattern but do “run in families,” our genome diversity studies include sequence variation at several genes with important neurologic functions, candidate genes for various neuropyschiatric disorders, and genes demonstrated to be associated with alcoholism. Managing these genotype and allele frequency data and making them publicly available has also involved us in a major bioinformatics effort: ALFRED, the allele frequency database we have developed. That database, illustrations of our human evolution findings, recent publications, and other material can be accessed through the Lab’s website.

Links

Recent Publications

  • Pakstis, A.J., et al. (2007). Candidate SNPs for a universal individual identification panel. Human Genet. 121:305-317.
  • Oota, H., et al. (2007). Conservative evolution in duplicated genes of the primate Class 1 ADH cluster. Gene 392:64-76.

Kenneth K. Kidd

Contact

E-mail
kenneth.kidd@yale.edu