J. Anim Sci.
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Journal of Animal Science, Vol 70, Issue 1 57-61, Copyright © 1992 by American Society of Animal Science


JOURNAL ARTICLE

Multiple-trait restricted maximum likelihood for simulated measures of ovulation rate with underlying multivariate normal distributions

L. D. Van Vleck and K. E. Gregory
Roman L. Hruska U.S. Meat Animal Research Center, U.S. Department of Agriculture, ARS, Lincoln, NE 68583-0908.

A data set that was used to estimate covariance components with REML for an animal model with eight measures of ovulation rate treated as separate traits was used as a template to simulate data sets of eight multivariate normal traits that were then truncated to binomial traits. The model for simulation included eight measures on 610 animals with 1,071 animals in the numerator relationship matrix. Heritabilities were equal for the eight measures, and both genetic and phenotypic correlations among the measures were equal. Ten replications for each combination of heritability (.15, .25, and .35) and genetic correlation (.50, .66, and .90) were simulated on the normal scale. For each replicate, estimates of the eight heritabilities and 28 genetic correlations were obtained by multiple-trait REML. The usual transformation of heritability estimated on the binomial scale overestimated heritability on the normal scale. Genetic correlations on the binomial scale seriously underestimated the correlations on the normal scale. Standard errors of the estimates obtained by replication were somewhat larger than the approximate SE from REMLPK (the multi-trait REML program of K. Meyer). A final set of 10 simulated replications with heritability of .25 and genetic correlation of 1.00 resulted in average estimates of .18 for heritability and of .66 for genetic correlation that agree closely with those from the analysis of measures of ovulation at eight estrous cycles used as a template; averages for heritability of .16 and for genetic correlation of .66 were obtained.


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C. H Mallinckrodt, C. J Kaiser, J. G Watkin, G. Molenberghs, and R. J Carroll
The effect of correlation structure on treatment contrasts estimated from incomplete clinical trial data with likelihood-based repeated measures compared with last observation carried forward ANOVA
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Copyright © 1992 by the American Society of Animal Science.