VERY EARLY DRAFT PAGE THAT IS IN DEVELOPMENT
Different test companies have non-overlapping sets of testers unique to their customer base. MyHeritage, for example, has a much stronger appeal and in-roads to many non-North American users. FTDNA has attracted surname study testers who then simply do their autosomal test work there also. As a result, there is a strong interest to do cross-site analysis and match study. Not to mention that maybe the test company site is not employing the latest and greatest available tools to analyze their own test results. For whatever the reasons, there is a large crowd that work to use 3rd Party Tools on either their desktop computer or the cloud that is accessible via a browser. This page attempts to capture the details of what is working today and other best practices to supporting this type of effort.
Early on, the push was to get matches to transfer their results to a popular 3rd Party Tool named GEDMatch. Now-a-days, it is more focused around using the desktop tool GenomeMate Pro with a future glint toward the upcoming, new, online tool Genetic.Family. Key is, these tools need to be fed and care must be taken as to how you gather and feed them; especially for continued maintenance of your analysis over time as you update from the source data.
The focus here is not how to extract the RAW data file of autosomal SNPs from one test company and upload it into another (or possibly 3rd party tool like GEDMatch). But more how to extract the match lists and shared matches along with segment match data (when available) and pedigree trees to then combine and analyze. A key difference is this is gathering the data that is the result of analyzing the match database. Something each tester has available to themselves without asking for the matches RAW Data file (or asking it be transferred to another tool).
GenomeMate Pro is not the only tool that can be fed. The multitude of new clustering tools all need to be fed the same match list data.
Add tabs per test company and then discuss the techniques to feed each tool within the tab for that company.
Different test companies have non-overlapping sets of testers unique to their customer base. MyHeritage, for example, has a much stronger appeal and in-roads to many non-North American users. FTDNA has attracted surname study testers who then simply do their autosomal test work there also. As a result, there is a strong interest to do cross-site analysis and match study. Not to mention that maybe the test company site is not employing the latest and greatest available tools to analyze their own test results. For whatever the reasons, there is a large crowd that work to use 3rd Party Tools on either their desktop computer or the cloud that is accessible via a browser. This page attempts to capture the details of what is working today and other best practices to supporting this type of effort.
Early on, the push was to get matches to transfer their results to a popular 3rd Party Tool named GEDMatch. Now-a-days, it is more focused around using the desktop tool GenomeMate Pro with a future glint toward the upcoming, new, online tool Genetic.Family. Key is, these tools need to be fed and care must be taken as to how you gather and feed them; especially for continued maintenance of your analysis over time as you update from the source data.
The focus here is not how to extract the RAW data file of autosomal SNPs from one test company and upload it into another (or possibly 3rd party tool like GEDMatch). But more how to extract the match lists and shared matches along with segment match data (when available) and pedigree trees to then combine and analyze. A key difference is this is gathering the data that is the result of analyzing the match database. Something each tester has available to themselves without asking for the matches RAW Data file (or asking it be transferred to another tool).
GenomeMate Pro is not the only tool that can be fed. The multitude of new clustering tools all need to be fed the same match list data.
Add tabs per test company and then discuss the techniques to feed each tool within the tab for that company.