First Time at GEDmatch

A Segment-ology TIDBIT

I’ll try to answer the question: “I just uploaded to GEDmatch, it’s so complex, what do I do now?”

FIRST – take a deep breath, and exhale slowly…….. GEDmatch is a powerful tool, with a lot of features. In many ways it is complex. But it also has some very simple and helpful utilities – I’ll point them out.

SECOND – take a few minutes to look over your GEDmatch homepage – there are several broad areas. The main tools are in the blue box on the right side titled: Analyze Your Data – I’ll come back to that and focus on some of the tools. Other information is in gray boxes – please review the titles before launching into the tools.

On the left side:

Your Log-in Profile – a box with information about you, and how to change it.

Learn More – a box with several links to more information about GEDmatch – you might want to click on each one to get a feel for the resources that are there to help you.

Your DNA Resources – a box with a handy list of your DNA kits at GEDmatch (in the beginning you’ll only have the one you just uploaded, but you can upload more kits whenever you want.)  At the bottom is a link to “EDIT or DELETE” any of your listed DNA Resources – you can open this up to just look.

Your GEDCOM Resources – a box which lists any GEDCOMs you’ve uploaded, and a link to manage them.

On the right side:

File Uploads – a box with tools to upload your raw DNA data files and tools to upload GEDCOMs (a GEDCOM is a file of your genealogy, not your DNA)

Analyze Your Data – a box with tools to utilize your DNA data and a box to utilize GEDCOMS – more below

Tier 1 Utilities – a box with more tools to utilize your data for folks who pay a subscription (wait to see how much you utilize GEDmatch before you subscribe…)

Genesis Beta – a box for certain kits (23andMe V5 kits – since July 2017; and LivingDNA kits)

THIRD – So, after this overview, where to start first?

I’d start with the first tool: One-to-many Matches – Click on this link and use the little “down triangle” to see your kit number and select it (or just type in your kit number – the form is like: A123456). Leave everything else alone and click on Display Results. After a second or two, you’ll get a table of your top 2,000 Matches – with their name, email, kit number, and other info. The default is to list the closest Matches first. Please read the information above the table, before we jump into the fun part. It’s important to know this info and that it’s here as a reference (many folks just look immediately at the Matches and then ask questions which are answered in this introductory material).  Next read each of the column titles – some won’t make sense, yet, but note that some folks list Haplogroups; some have linked genealogies [under GED/WikiTree column]; and there is summary data on the Autosomal and X data. The chart is sorted on Total cM, but notice the small blue triangles that let you sort on most columns.

In one sense this is similar to your results at AncestryDNA – a list of Matches with summary DNA info, and sometimes a link to a Tree.

To see the specific DNA segment(s) you share with a Match, click on the A link (under Autosomal Details). This takes you to the “one-to-one” utility, with your kit and the Match’s kit already filled in. Just click on the Submit button to see the DNA segment data. Or, for a more colorful version, go back to the one-to-one page and click on the Graphics and Positions button and then click on Submit. Again, please read the legend at the top first – then scroll down the page to see all 22 chromosomes – a solid blue bar indicates a shared segment. This view puts the shared DNA with a Match into perspective.

Just like with any other DNA site, you still have to work with your Matches and/or their posted Tree to determine a Common Ancestor. The emails at GEDmatch give you a way to do this.

FOURTH

If you know of someone’s GEDmatch kit number, you can click on the “One-to-one compare” utility on your home page and fill in your and your Matches kit numbers to see the shared segment data.

FIFTH

Try the GEDCOM tools. Click on “GEDCOM + DNA Matches” and fill in your kit number to get a list of your DNA Matches with linked GEDCOMs (Trees). Note a Match (under DNA Name) and click on the link under the GEDCOM ID column to get a summary box. Then click on Pedigree, and adjust the number of generations to suit your search.

If you’ve uploaded your own GEDCOM, my favorite utility is “2 GEDCOMs”. Fill in your GEDCOM number (remember it’s listed on the left side of your GEDmatch Homepage, after it’s uploaded) and your Match’s GEDCOM number (from the GEDCOM + DNA Matches list) and hit “Compare”. This amazing utility will list every ancestor who is the same in both GEDCOMs. Finding a Common Ancestor doesn’t get easier than this!

SIXTH

Try the any of the other utilities in the Analyze Your Data box (some are fun, some are helpful):

-Admixture (there are several different utilities from different scientists – noodle around)

Are your parents related?

Archaic DNA matches – compare your DNA to DNA from the “Clovis” Man or “Kennewick Man” or “Altai Neanderthal” and other ancient people whose DNA has been extracted. Includes a link to an ancient DNA site. Try the kits in the one-to-one utility.

You cannot “hurt” anything here – so click on anything that interests you and noodle around.

SUMMARY

GEDmatch lets you compare with folks who have tested at other companies –to find close relatives who tested, but not at the same company you used. Find new relatives – particularly close ones.

A main feature is the ability to “see” the shared segments with your Matches – including between different companies. This feature is essential for Triangulation and/or Chromosome Mapping.

Note: I often find Matches who tested at one of the companies, but for some reason don’t show up as a Match at that company.  I’ve tested at all the companies, and still find many new Matches at GEDmatch.

The 2 GEDCOMs utility gets you straight to Common Ancestors (you have to have uploaded your GEDCOM too).

In the end, it’s still up to you to find to work with your Matches (and their info) to find Common Ancestors. GEDmatch provides some good tools to help.

 

[22T] Segment-ology: First Time at GEDmatch TIDBIT by Jim Bartlett 20180501

6 thoughts on “First Time at GEDmatch

  1. Thank you so much for referring to your site here (from the Facebook user group for GEDmatch)!! I hadn’t tried the GEDCOM tools (your 5th item). This helps a lot!

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  2. Thanks for the info Jim.

    I was wondering if segments that don’t triangulate are still valid as it seems people that use the chromosome painters don’t require this.

    As I understand it the algorithms at the DNA companies analyze the data using only one letter of the pair say t and a and because of this can’t distinguish between maternal and paternal chromosomes. Why do they do this? When they carry out phasing they must do it and if so why not report it? And does the raw data contain both letters say a and t and g and c. If so is there a way for someone who has a kit to analyze the data themselves?

    Thanks

    Bill Hickey

    Sent from my iPhone

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    • Bill, I download all shared segments to a speadsheet, and try to Triangulate each one. EVERY shared segment has to go someplace – on a paternal or maternal chromosome, or it’s false. A few shared segments will be “undetermined” if there are no other overlapping segments to work with. A chromosome browser will “show” every shared segment – it doesn’t know which side the segment is on, or even if it’s a valid segment. I just posted a blog about Base Pairs as this often comes up. The “phasing” that AncestryDNA does is really “population phasing” designed to weed out some false segments. And yes, you can look at your raw data. Download your raw data file, unzip it, and open it up – It’s a list of hundreds of thousands of addresses on each chromosome and the two alleles found. I don’t know too many folks who are going to “analyze” 600,000 rows of data – let the companies do it. Jim

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  3. I uploaded my older 23andMe kit to Genesis Beta and found it very worth while because the program offers, at least for now, triangulation for people who match both, or one of two kits.

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    • Robert, I have also uploaded my original 23andMe kit to Genesis – so that I could compare with some cousins there. But there are far more Matches to be found on the basic GEDmatch site. At least until the two sites are merged. Jim

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