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MiniPCR Wrongfully Convicted Activity - Student Guide

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miniPCR bio™ Electrophoresis Forensics Lab. Wrongfully Convicted? Instructor's and Student's Guide Version: 1.1 - Release February 2022 - © 2022 by miniPCR bio™ Additional Supports P./30 STR location Genotype Genotype frequency D2S441 11, 14 0.1544 D5S818 11, 12 0.2230 D7S820 7, 8 0.0054 D10S1248 13, 13 0.0764 D13S317 11, 12 0.1772 D16S539 8, 14 .00092 D18S51 20, 21 .00069 Table 2. Genotype frequencies for select STR locations National Institute of Standards and Technology. "1036 Revised U.S. Population" July 2017. Dataset. https://strbase.nist.gov/ NISTpop.htm. Accessed 7/29/2020. In the previous questions, you focused on a single STR location, but remember that forensics scientists analyze many STR regions. Table 2 shows an STR profile that contains seven STR locations. In this table, the genotype frequencies, like those you calculated in the previous problems, have been calculated for you. 3. Based on the genotype frequencies in Table 2: A. For which STR location(s) does this individual have a common genotype shared by more than 20% of the population? 4. Imagine you are testing a crime scene DNA sample. While it is standard for forensic scientists to examine at least 20 STR locations to create a DNA profile, this has not always been the case. A. Multiply the genotype frequencies in Table 2 to calculate the random match probability for this STR profile using the product rule. Show your work. B. For which STR location(s) does this individual have a genotype so rare that less than 0.1% of the population share it?

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