Simon Myers

Simon Myers

University of Oxford

H-index: 53

Europe-United Kingdom

About Simon Myers

Simon Myers, With an exceptional h-index of 53 and a recent h-index of 42 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Oxford, specializes in the field of Statistical genetics, Population genetics, Evolutionary genetics, Bioinformatics, Reproductive biology.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

The distribution of branch duration and detection of inversions in ancestral recombination graphs

Relating pathogenic loss-of-function mutations in humans to their evolutionary fitness costs

A Genomics England haplotype reference panel and the imputation of the UK Biobank

Leveraging fine-scale population structure reveals conservation in genetic effect sizes between human populations across a range of human phenotypes

Multi-ancestry genetic study of type 2 diabetes highlights the power of diverse populations for discovery and translation

Altering the binding properties of PRDM9 partially restores fertility across the species boundary

Inferring population histories for ancient genomes using genome-wide genealogies

Rapid genotype imputation from sequence with reference panels

Simon Myers Information

University

Position

Lecturer in Bioinformatics

Citations(all)

55309

Citations(since 2020)

14148

Cited By

46725

hIndex(all)

53

hIndex(since 2020)

42

i10Index(all)

67

i10Index(since 2020)

59

Email

University Profile Page

University of Oxford

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Simon Myers Skills & Research Interests

Statistical genetics

Population genetics

Evolutionary genetics

Bioinformatics

Reproductive biology

Top articles of Simon Myers

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

The distribution of branch duration and detection of inversions in ancestral recombination graphs

bioRxiv

Anastasia Ignatieva

Martina Favero

Jere Koskela

Jaromir Sant

Simon R Myers

2023

Relating pathogenic loss-of-function mutations in humans to their evolutionary fitness costs

Elife

Ipsita Agarwal

Zachary L Fuller

Simon R Myers

Molly Przeworski

2023/1/17

A Genomics England haplotype reference panel and the imputation of the UK Biobank

medRxiv

Sinan Shi

Simone Rubinacci

Sile Hu

Loukas Moutsianas

Alex Stuckey

...

2023

Leveraging fine-scale population structure reveals conservation in genetic effect sizes between human populations across a range of human phenotypes

bioRxiv

Sile Hu

Lino AF Ferreira

Sinan Shi

Garrett Hellenthal

Jonathan Marchini

...

2023

Multi-ancestry genetic study of type 2 diabetes highlights the power of diverse populations for discovery and translation

Nature genetics

Anubha Mahajan

Cassandra N Spracklen

Weihua Zhang

Maggie CY Ng

Lauren E Petty

...

2022/5

Altering the binding properties of PRDM9 partially restores fertility across the species boundary

Molecular biology and evolution

Benjamin Davies

Anjali Gupta Hinch

Alberto Cebrian-Serrano

Samy Alghadban

Philipp W Becker

...

2021/12/1

Inferring population histories for ancient genomes using genome-wide genealogies

Molecular Biology and Evolution

Leo Speidel

Lara Cassidy

Robert W Davies

Garrett Hellenthal

Pontus Skoglund

...

2021/9/1

Rapid genotype imputation from sequence with reference panels

Nature genetics

Robert W Davies

Marek Kucka

Dingwen Su

Sinan Shi

Maeve Flanagan

...

2021/7

Trans-ancestry genetic study of type 2 diabetes highlights the power of diverse populations for discovery and translation

MedRxiv

Anubha Mahajan

Cassandra N Spracklen

Weihua Zhang

Maggie CY Ng

Lauren E Petty

...

2020/9/23

ZCWPW1 is recruited to recombination hotspots by PRDM9 and is essential for meiotic double strand break repair

Elife

Daniel Wells

Emmanuelle Bitoun

Daniela Moralli

Gang Zhang

Anjali Hinch

...

2020/8/3

See List of Professors in Simon Myers University(University of Oxford)