Replies: 6 comments 5 replies
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I 100% agree. I already do exactly that, but external to GEDCOM, in my own software. Having just those fields as part of GEDCOM would be a great help. |
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I don't use DNA in my own research so I am missing some info here, but here's an effort to turn this list of data fields into an example of what we might add to GEDCOM: 0 @D1@ DNA
1 PERSON_1 @I1@
1 PERSON_2 @I2@
1 PROVIDER Name of some company
1 SHARED_CM 50
2 PERCENT 0.735
2 UNWEIGHTED 52
1 SHARED_SEGMENTS 18
1 LONGEST_SHARED_SEGMENT 7
...
0 @I1@ INDI
1 NOTE First person being matched
0 @I2@ INDI
1 NOTE Second person being matched This design isn't ideal from a "the way GEDCOM usually does things" standpoint. This kind of data feels to me more like an attribute or Aside: it's not clear why we'd include both cM and percent. All the DNA genealogy sites I consulted suggested that these are defined in terms of on another; in particular |
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The segment-level info should be included, if available, as that widens the usage (DNA Painter and match analysis). Ancestry does not provide this level of detail, but FTDNA and GEDmatch, for instance, do. Personally, I would use an ASSO . It could be part of either INDI since it is symmetrical. |
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The segment-level info is a list of the specific matches for the pair of people. A matching pair of people would have 1 or more segment matches. A segment match includes the following info:
For Example: There is additional info that may be available for the match (overall):
I agree that storing Y-DNA and mtDNA haplogroups is another 'good thing'. These are attributes of the person, not the match. Only males have Y-DNA haplogroup. Everyone has an mtDNA haplogroup. R-M269 is the most common European Y-DNA haplogroup (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_R-M269) . |
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Discussed in steering committee 23 MAY 2024
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Existing software support: In June 2024, RootsMagic released support for entering Autosomal DNA Match info in RootsMagic version 10. My understanding is that they do not currently include DNA Match data in GEDCOM export files. BanyanDNA and the What Are The Odds tools support import of GEDCOM files, but DNA Match data must be manually entered. |
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With the growth of autosomal DNA testing for genealogical purposes, and tools that utilize DNA match data. There is a need to store and transfer autosomal match list data as part of GEDCOM files.
If this capability was added to GEDCOM, and the PC Genealogical Database tools (Ancestral Quest, RootsMagic, etc.) were to add the capability to enter and maintain autosomal DNA match list data to their respective user interfaces, and include the data in GEDCOM export files, then tools such as What-are-the-Odds (WATO) and BanyanDNA could import the match data as part of a GEDCOM import.
This could dramatically improve user efficiency in the use of DNA match analysis.
The proposed data fields are:
RIN 1
RIN 2
Data Provider (Ancestry, 23andMe, GEDMatch, MyHeritage, Other)
Shared cM
Percent Shared
Number of Shared Segments
Unweighted Shared cM
Longest Segment cM
Note: This proposal DOES NOT include management of raw DNA data files.
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