G Biondi
University of Turin
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Publication
Featured researches published by G Biondi.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 1999
Christina Martínez-Labarga; Olga Rickards; Renato Scacchi; Rosa Maria Corbo; G Biondi; José A. Peña; C. Varas De Vieira; A. Guevara; M.S. Mesa Santurino; G.F. De Stefano
The genetic structure of two African-Ecuadorian communities, Rio Cayapas and Viche (Esmeraldas province, northwest Ecuador), was studied on the basis of ACP1, ADA, AK1, CA2, ESD, GLO1, G6PD, PGD, and PGM1 subtypes and thermostability, PGM2, HBbeta, F13A, F13B, ORM1, AHSG, C6, C7, and APOC2 gene frequency, and migration data on 255 individuals. The fixation index of Wright (F(ST)), correspondence, and genetic distance analysis were applied to compare the genetic relationships between these communities and other American populations of African ancestry. F(ST) values from the migration data and surname origins suggest that Rio Cayapas is genetically more isolated and shows less mobility and admixture than does Viche. The genetic admixture estimates indicate a large contribution of African genes to the gene pool of both communities (74.3% to 58.4%), whereas the proportion of the Amerindian component differs significantly (14.5% in Rio Cayapas to 27.6% in Viche).
Journal of Biosocial Science | 1993
G Biondi; Gabriel W. Lasker; P. Raspe; C. G. N. Mascie-Taylor
Data on grandparental surnames were obtained from children in 45 Italo-Albanesi villages in nine provinces of southern Italy and Sicily. Concordance of surnames (isonymy) and inbreedding by village were estimated for each province and on the total sample. Total mean isonymy is 0.0251. The weighted mean inbreeding coefficient, and its random and non-random components are 0.0063, 0.0024 and 0.0039, respectively. Isonymy values are similar to those of rural Italian villages except that Alpine and some Appennine villages appear to be more isolated and inbred.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 1996
G Biondi; Olga Rickards; Cristina Martinez-Labarga; Tea Taraborelli; Bianca Maria Ciminelli; Giorgio Gruppioni
Genetic structure of the Berba of Benin was studied on the basis of biodemographic data and ABO, RH, MNS, KEL, JK, FY, ACP1, ADA, AK1, CA2, ESD, GLO1, G6PD, PGD, PGM1 (subtypes and thermostability), PGM2, PGP, SODA, HB alpha, HB beta, HB delta, BF, C3, and HP gene frequencies. Comparisons were carried out with other populations of Benin and of sub-Saharan Africa. Correspondence analysis revealed genetic differentiation among the three main groups of populations who inhabit sub-Saharan Africa: Bushmen-Hottentots, Pygmies, and Negroes. The genetic differentiation of the Negroes in relation to their linguistic affiliation and geographic localization was evident. The first group included the populations belonging to the Bantoid subfamily of the Nigritic linguistic stock living in southern Africa; in the second subcluster the populations of central-eastern Africa were localized, and the third subcluster included the populations living in the West.
Journal of Biosocial Science | 2005
G Biondi; A. Vienna; J. A. Peña Garcia; C. G. N. Mascie-Taylor
Surnames were obtained for the second half of the 20th century from civil and religious marriage registers on fifteen Provençal-Italian and five Italian villages of Cuneo Province, Italy. To insert in the analysis an outward comparison, surnames from two Italian villages of Turin Province, one parish of Turin, one village of Alessandria Province and one village of Asti Province were also collected. Ethnicity does not seem to be the main factor affecting the present genetic structure of the Provençal-Italians. They are an open community, and evidence the end of the genetic isolation of the alpine populations.
Journal of Biosocial Science | 2001
A. Vienna; J. A. Peña Garcia; C. G. N. Mascie-Taylor; G Biondi
Surnames of grandparents were collected from children in the primary schools of the Albanian-Italian, Croat-Italian and Greek-Italian villages of southern Italy and Sicily. The coefficients of relationships by isonymy show almost no relationship with ethnicity. Ethnolinguistic minorities of southern Italy and Sicily are geographically subdivided into two main clusters: the first cluster comprises the Albanian, Croat and Greek communities of the Adriatic area; and the second cluster comprises the Albanian and Greek communities of the Ionian, Thirrenian and Sicilian areas.
Journal of Biosocial Science | 2001
G Biondi; P. Raspe; C. G. N. Mascie-Taylor
Data on grandparental surnames were obtained from school-children in 22 communes from Campobasso Province, Italy (Molise Region). The distribution of surnames was shown to be almost exactly linear by a log2-log2 transformation, which justified the fitting of the data to Fishers logarithmic distribution. The values for v were higher among women. When v was standardized to minimize bias due to sample size, the value was one-third the estimate of migration from exogamy data. The higher values of v for females indicate that there is greater mobility of female marriage partners than males.
Journal of Biosocial Science | 2000
G Biondi; P. Raspe; C. G. N. Mascie-Taylor
The population of Campobasso Province shows a level of inbreeding that is distinct from most Italian rural populations, regardless of their geographic location (Fr=0.0040; Fn=0.0102; Ft=0.0142). The genetic structure of the Italian-Greek communities of Lecce and Reggio Calabria Provinces does not appear to be affected by ethnicity. The level of inbreeding in Italian-Greeks of Reggio Calabria Province is similar to other Italians of Campobasso Province (Fr=0.0041; Fn=0.0127; Ft=0.0168). The Italian-Greeks of Lecce Province show random mating, and their inbreeding is in fact very low (Fr=0.0038; Fn=0.0024; Ft=0.0062).
Journal of Biosocial Science | 1993
G Biondi; Olga Rickards; C. R. Guglielmino; Gian Franco De Stefano
In a sample of 311 couples from the Afroamerican community of Bluefields, Eastern Nicaragua, the distribution of matrimonial distance shows a deviation from the leptokurtic rule. This results from assortative mating among the population.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999
Rosaria Scozzari; Fulvio Cruciani; Piero Santolamazza; Patrizia Malaspina; Antonio Torroni; Daniele Sellitto; B Arredi; Giovanni Destro-Bisol; G.F. De Stefano; Olga Rickards; Cristina Martínez-Labarga; David Modiano; G Biondi; Pedro Moral; Antonel Olckers; Douglas C. Wallace; Andrea Novelletto
Human Biology | 1998
Olga Rickards; Cristina Martínez-Labarga; Giuseppina Scano; G.F. De Stefano; G Biondi; M. Pacaci; H. Walter