2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.012
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Making blood ‘Melanesian’: Fieldwork and isolating techniques in genetic epidemiology (1963–1976)

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Cited by 12 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Unlike population geneticists, however, they tended to be less concerned with evolutionary 'primitiveness' than by accessibility and the availability of well-validated family histories. Consequently, medical geneticists were as likely to conduct their research among culturally defined 'isolates' living in Europe and North America, such as Ashkenazi Jews and the Pennsylvania Amish, as among more geographically remote populations (Lindee, 2005: 58-89, 156-186;Wailoo and Pemberton, 2008;Widmer, 2014). This shared interest in population isolates was one of the few places where ideas from population genetics intersected directly with the medical geneticists' efforts to identify disease genes.…”
Section: Populations and Disease Genes In The 1950s To 1970smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unlike population geneticists, however, they tended to be less concerned with evolutionary 'primitiveness' than by accessibility and the availability of well-validated family histories. Consequently, medical geneticists were as likely to conduct their research among culturally defined 'isolates' living in Europe and North America, such as Ashkenazi Jews and the Pennsylvania Amish, as among more geographically remote populations (Lindee, 2005: 58-89, 156-186;Wailoo and Pemberton, 2008;Widmer, 2014). This shared interest in population isolates was one of the few places where ideas from population genetics intersected directly with the medical geneticists' efforts to identify disease genes.…”
Section: Populations and Disease Genes In The 1950s To 1970smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the 1950s and 1960s, biologists often collaborated with ethnologists and linguists to approach native populations (Lipphardt, , pp. 50–61; Widmer, ). In 1960, William Laughlin explained that there were two steps in the work of a physical anthropologist: approaching the natives in order to delimitate the population to be studied by often collaborating with an ethnologist or a linguist, and the data collection and analysis of anthropological traits (Laughlin, ).…”
Section: Biocca's Epistemologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They included the Alpha Helix , a floating laboratory managed by the Scripps Institute for Oceanographic Research and funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation. In 1972, Gadjusek took the Alpha Helix to collect blood from a range of populations in the island regions of the Western Pacific (Radin ; Widmer ). This work was undertaken in conjunction with the IBP.…”
Section: Fragment 4: Bethesda Maryland 1960s and 1970smentioning
confidence: 99%