The Basics

DNA variants occur at different frequencies in different places across the world, and every marker has its own pattern of geographical distribution. The 23andMe Ancestry Composition algorithm combines information about these patterns with the unique set of DNA alleles in your genome to estimate your genetic ancestry.

Here's an example of a haplogroup, a special kind of DNA marker, that illustrates the idea. This map shows the frequency of the maternal haplogroup H around the world. Haplogroup H is very common in Europe, is also found in Africa and Asia, and is rarely seen in people native to Australia or the Americas.

Worldwide distribution of maternal haplogroup H

The association between this marker and geographic location works in two ways. If you know you have European ancestry, we know that there's a decent chance you have the H haplogroup. And if you have the H haplogroup, we know that your genetic history likely includes at least one European ancestor.

Although we can't locate your ancestry with much precision based on this one DNA marker, we measure hundreds of thousands of DNA markers on the 23andMe platform. If we combine the evidence from many markers, each of which offers a little bit of information about where in the world you're from, we can develop a clear overall picture.

Wrinkle #1: People Usually Have Multiple Ancestries

If all of your DNA came from one place in the world, figuring out where you're from would be easy. Recent research has suggested that, for a European person whose entire family comes from the same place, genetic analysis can locate their ancestral home within a range of around 100 miles!

But most people's ancestors come from many places. The technical word for this is admixture—the genetic mixing of previously separate populations. For example, it's common for people of European descent to have ancestry from all around Europe, and Latino people typically have ancestors from the Americas, Europe, and sometimes Africa.

Our Ancestry Composition algorithm handles the challenge of admixture by breaking your chromosomes into short adjacent windows, like boxcars in a train. These windows are small enough that it is generally safe to assume that you inherited all the DNA in any given window from a single ancestor many generations back.

Wrinkle #2: We Don't Know Which DNA Comes From Which Parent

Recall that for each of your 23 chromosome pairs, one chromosome in each pair comes from your mom and the other from your dad. Genotyping chips don't capture information about which markers came from which parent.

Here's a quick example to illustrate this point. Say, for a short stretch of Chromosome 1, you inherited the following genotypes at three consecutive DNA markers:

from Dad: A-T-C
from Mom: G-T-A

When we look at your raw 23andMe data in this spot on Chromosome 1, we'll see the following:

You: A/G - T/T - A/C

The genotypes where you inherited different variants from mom and dad—in this case, the markers on the ends—are jumbled up. There are two possible "haplotypes" that are consistent with the raw data, and we don't know which one is your actual DNA sequence. It could be:

A-T-A
G-T-C

which happens to be wrong, or it could be:

A-T-C
G-T-A

which is right. The technical term for determining which alleles reside on the same chromosome together is phasing. DNA data like our raw data is called unphased.

So what? This matters because we can learn more from long runs of many DNA markers together than we can learn from individual DNA markers alone. In the above example, the combination A-T-C will generally say more about your ancestry than the A, T, and C say when they are considered separately. Luckily, we can use statistical methods to estimate the phasing of your chromosomes. After phasing your raw data, the Ancestry Composition algorithm calculates ancestry separately for each phased chromosome.

The Setup: Defining Ancestry Populations

Prep 1: The Datasets

The Ancestry Composition algorithm calculates your ancestry by comparing your genome to the genomes of people whose ancestries we already know. To make this work, we need a lot of reference data! Our reference datasets include genotypes from 14,812 people who were chosen generally to reflect populations that existed before transcontinental travel and migration were common (at least 500 years ago). However, because different parts of the world have their own unique demographic histories, some Ancestry Composition results may reflect ancestry from a much broader time window than the past 500 years.

Customers comprise the lion's share of the reference datasets used by Ancestry Composition. When a 23andMe research participant tells us they have four grandparents all born in the same country—and the population of that country didn't experience massive migration in the last few hundred years, as happened throughout the Americas and in Australia, for example—that person becomes a candidate for inclusion in the reference data. We filter out all but one of any set of closely related people, since including closely related relatives can distort the results. And we remove outliers: people whose genetic ancestry doesn't seem to match up with their survey answers. To ensure a representative dataset, we filter aggressively—nearly ten percent of reference dataset candidates don't make the cut.

We also draw from public reference datasets, including the Human Genome Diversity Project, HapMap, and the 1000 Genomes Project. Finally, we incorporate data from 23andMe-sponsored projects, which are typically collaborations with academic researchers. We perform the same filtering on public and collaboration reference data that we do on 23andMe customer data.

Prep 2: Population Selection

The 47 Ancestry Composition populations are defined by genetically similar groups of people with known ancestry. We select Ancestry Composition populations by studying the reference datasets, choosing candidate populations that appear to cluster together, and then evaluating whether we can distinguish those groups in practice. Using this method, we refined the candidate reference populations until we arrived at a set that works well.

Principal components plot of 23andMe reference European populations

Here's an example of one of the diagnostic plots we use to select populations. The genomes in the European reference datasets are plotted using principal component analysis, which shows their overall genetic distance from each other. Each point on the plot represents one person, and we labeled the points with different symbols and colors based on their known ancestry. You can see that people from the same population (labeled with the same symbol) tend to cluster together. Some populations, like the Finns (the blue triangles on the left), are relatively isolated from the other populations. Because Finns are so genetically distinct, they have their own reference population in Ancestry Composition. Most country-level populations, however, overlap to some degree. In these cases, we experimented with different groupings of country-level populations to find combinations that we could distinguish with high confidence.

Some genetic ancestries are inherently difficult to distinguish because the people in those regions mixed throughout history or have shared history. As we obtain more data, populations will become easier to distinguish, and we will be able to report on more populations in the Ancestry Composition report.

Confronting Bias

Historically, biomedical research has disproportionately focused on participants of European descent. In light of this inequity, the 23andMe Research team is constantly working to acquire new data from diverse populations. Our mission at 23andMe is to help people access, understand, and benefit from the human genome. The best way we can do that for underserved populations is to include their genetic data in our research and in our Ancestry features—maximizing the granularity of Ancestry Composition for all of our customers and helping to combat disparities in genetic science. We have worked proactively to reduce bias in genetics research by initiating projects like the Global Genetics Project, the African Genetics Project, the Population Collaborations Program, and our NIH-funded genetic health resource for African Americans. The genetic information we collect through these initiatives and others like them will help to improve features such as Ancestry Composition and will benefit the scientific community at large.

The Ancestry Composition Algorithm

Overview

The Ancestry Composition algorithm comprises four distinct steps.

First, we use a computational method to estimate the phasing of your chromosomes, that is, to determine the contribution to your genome by each of your parents. Next, we break up the chromosomes into short windows, and we compare your DNA sequence in each window to the corresponding DNA in our reference datasets. We label your DNA with the ancestry whose reference DNA it's most similar, and then we process those assignments computationally to "smooth" them out. Each step in this process is described in more detail in the following sections.

Step 1: Phasing

Recall wrinkle #2 above. For each customer, we measure a set of genotypes (pairs of alleles). But what we really want is a pair of haplotypes for each chromosome. That is, we want to figure out the series of alleles present on each of your two copies of, for example, chromosome 7: one you received from your mother and one you received from your father. To do so, we first build a very large "phasing reference panel" using data from hundreds of thousands of customers. We then use Eagle (Loh et al., 2016) to phase these individuals jointly. Eagle uses sophisticated statistics and a very clever algorithm to do this. Once we have phased this large collection of customers, we can use the information inferred to efficiently phase new customers.

Step 2: Window Classification

After phasing your chromosomes, we segment them into consecutive windows containing ~300 genetic markers each. We measure between 7,400 and 45,000 markers per chromosome, which translates to 24 to 149 windows, depending on the chromosome's length. We consider each window in turn and compare your DNA to the reference datasets to determine which ancestry most closely corresponds to your DNA.

There are many ways to assign ancestry to DNA segments based on reference data, and we tried several. The best-performing option was a well-known classification tool called a support vector machine, or SVM. An SVM can "learn" different ancestry classifications based on a set of training examples and then assign new DNA segments to a learned category.

In the case of Ancestry Composition, we train the SVM with reference DNA sequences and tell it which ancestry population those sequences are from. Then, when we look at the DNA from a 23andMe customer with unknown ancestry (like you), we can ask the SVM to classify your DNA for us based on the reference datasets.

We chose an Ancestry Composition algorithm based on SVMs because it performed the best out of all the techniques that we tried. SVMs are also very fast, which is critical for a large and growing database.

Step 3: Smoothing

The SVM classifies each window of your genome independently, creating a "first draft" version of your ancestry result. We use another computational process, called the smoother, to smooth this raw SVM output. The smoother uses a version of a well-known mathematical tool called a Hidden Markov Model to correct, or “smooth,” two kinds of errors. Hidden Markov Models are used to analyze sequential data, like biological sequences or recorded speech. As an example, suppose we had three ancestry populations: X, Y, and Z. An example of output from the SVM might look like this:

chromosome 1, parent 1: X - X - X - Z - Z - Z - Y - Z
chromosome 1, parent 2: Z - Z - Z - X - X - X - X - X

The first kind of error the smoother corrects is an unusual assignment in the middle of a run of similar assignments. In the first line above, there's a run of Zs, interrupted by a single Y: Z - Z - Z - Y - Z. It's possible that the lone Y was a close call between Y and Z that went the wrong way. If that were the case, the smoother could correct it to Z - Z - Z - Z - Z.

The second kind of error the smoother corrects arises from the phasing step. Phasing algorithms can make mistakes, known as switch errors, where they mix up the DNA of one parent with that of another. The smoother can switch the ancestry assignments between your mother and your father if it detects one of these errors. In this example, there may be a switch error after the fourth window. If the switch were reversed, then the runs of Xs and the runs of Zs would stay together. In our simplified example, the smoother might output something like this:

chromosome 1, parent 1: Z - Z - Z - Z - Z - Z - Z - Z
chromosome 1, parent 2: X - X - X - X - X - X - X - X

This example illustrates the purpose of the smoother. But with real data the picture is much messier, and the answers are rarely so clean. So instead of assigning a single ancestry to each window like we did in this example, the smoother estimates the probabilities of each Ancestry Composition population matching each window of DNA. The following picture shows a concrete example:

Example plot of Ancestry Composition assignment probabilities

This is the output of the smoother analysis of one copy of chromosome 2. Starting on the left, there is a short run of pink, then a wider run of green, then another run of pink. In this chart, pink is the color for Sub-Saharan African ancestry, and green is the color for Indigenous American. The y-axis runs from 0 to 100 percent, and it shows the probability that the DNA in that region of the chromosome comes from each Ancestry Composition population. These pink and green regions fill the entire vertical space of the graph, which means that we are 100 percent confident that the DNA in those regions has Sub-Saharan African and Indigenous American genetic ancestry, respectively.

The next region to the right—between positions 50 and 100 on the x-axis—is a stretch of multi-colored blue. The thickest strip at the bottom is dark teal, which is the color for British & Irish. This segment of DNA has somewhere between a 50 percent chance and a 60 percent chance of reflecting from British & Irish ancestry. The other shades of blue show that the same DNA segment also has a chance of reflecting Italian, Iberian, or French & German ancestry. If you think back to the haplogroup example above, this result makes sense: it is normal for a DNA marker to match reference DNA from lots of places, even if it matches some places better than others. In this example, the result shows that this DNA segment matches reference DNA from all over Europe. We can very confidently conclude that this stretch of DNA reflects European ancestry, but the evidence isn't strong enough to assign it to one specific region of Europe with high confidence.

Step 4: Aggregation & Reporting

The last step is to summarize the results and display them in your Chromosome Painting. The way we do this is to apply a threshold to the probability plot as in this figure:

Applying a threshold to Ancestry Composition assignment probabilities

The horizontal line in this image indicates a 70 percent confidence threshold, which we will use for this example. You can view your own Chromosome Painting at different confidence thresholds, ranging from 50 percent (speculative) to 90 percent (conservative).

We look across the entire chromosome and ask whether any ancestry has an estimated probability exceeding the specified threshold (in this case 70 percent). In this example, with the exception of the blue European stretch, the ancestry estimates exceed 70 percent over the majority of the chromosome. Each region contributes to your overall Ancestry Composition in proportion to its size: For example, the green Indigenous American segment near the end of this plot makes up about 0.26 percent of the entire genome. Even though there is some probability that the segment comes from a different population, the Indigenous American proportion exceeds the 70 percent threshold, and so we add 0.26 percent Indigenous American to the overall Ancestry Composition at this threshold.

In the case of the European segment, no single ancestry exceeds the 70 percent threshold, so we don't assign that DNA to any fine-grained ancestries. Instead, we refer to our hierarchy of ancestries. There is a "Broadly Northern European" ancestry that includes four fine-level ancestries: British & Irish, Scandinavian, Finnish, and French & German. If, when we add up the contributions of each of these subgroups, the total contribution toward Broadly Northern European exceeds the 70 percent threshold, then we will report the region as Broadly Northern European.

In this example, the Broadly Northern European reference populations still don't exceed the 70 percent threshold, but the combined probabilities of all the European populations do. So this region is assigned "Broadly European" ancestry.

We use broad Ancestry Composition categories to avoid making assumptions about your ancestry when your DNA matches several different country-level populations. In regions where no ancestry—including the broad ancestries—exceeds the specified threshold, we report "Unassigned" ancestry. You can see the entire ancestry hierarchy in your Ancestry Composition report by clicking "See all tested populations."

Connecting With Close Family

Ancestry Composition is even more powerful if you have a biological parent who is also in the 23andMe database. Click here to learn more about connecting with family and friends.

Your connecting with a biological parent greatly simplifies the computational problem of figuring out what DNA you got from which parent (c.f., Step 1: Phasing). That may translate into better Ancestry Composition results, in the sense that you might see more assignment to the fine-resolution ancestries: more Scandinavian, less Northern European.

Why is that? Remember, the smoother—which generates your final Ancestry Composition estimate—has to correct two kinds of errors: those along the chromosome and those between the chromosomes. When your chromosomes are phased using genetic information from your parent, mistakes between the chromosomes (switch errors) are extremely rare, so the smoother can be more confident.

If you connect with one or both of your biological parents, you will get an extra result. You'll be able to see the Parental Inheritance view, which shows your mother's contribution to your ancestry on one side and your father's contribution to your ancestry on the other. We can't provide this view if you don't have a parent connected because we need at least one of your parents to orient the results. Here's an example of what you can learn from Inheritance View: say your Ancestry Composition includes a small amount of Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry. When you look at your Inheritance View, you'll be able to see from which parent you inherited it.

Testing & Validation

Ancestry Composition includes a lot of steps, and each step has to be tested. We've discussed a few of those tests already while explaining our algorithm. In this section, we want to share some test results to give a sense of how well Ancestry Composition works. This section focuses on the final test we run, because that integrates the performance of each of the steps into an overall picture.

This test looks at two classic measures of model performance, precision and recall. These are the standard measurements that researchers use to test how well a prediction system works. Precision answers the question "When the system predicts that a piece of DNA comes from population A, how often is the DNA actually from population A?" Recall answers the question "Of the pieces of DNA that actually are from population A, how often does the system correctly predict that they are from population A?"

There is a tradeoff between precision and recall, so we have to strike a balance between them. A high-precision, low-recall system will be extremely picky about assigning, say, Scandinavian ancestry. The system would only assign DNA as Scandinavian when it is very confident. That will yield high precision—since the assignment of Scandinavian is almost always correct—but low recall, because a lot of true Scandinavian ancestry is left unassigned.

With a low-precision, high-recall system the opposite problem exists. In this case, the system liberally assigns Scandinavian ancestry. Any time a piece of DNA might be Scandinavian, it is assigned that ancestry. This will yield high recall, as most genuine Scandinavian DNA will be labeled accordingly, but low precision, because non-Scandinavian DNA will often be incorrectly labeled Scandinavian.

The ideal system has both high precision and high recall, but that may be impossible in real life. Let's see how Ancestry Composition performs on these metrics. For this quality-control test, we set apart 20 percent of the reference database, approximately 3,000 individuals of known ancestry. We trained and ran the entire Ancestry Composition pipeline on the other 80 percent of the reference individuals. Then we treated the "hold-out" 20 percent as though they were new 23andMe customers and used our Ancestry Composition pipeline to calculate their ancestries. Since we know these people's true ancestries, we can check to see how accurate their Ancestry Composition results are. We ran this test five times each at various minimum confidence thresholds, with a different 20 percent held out each time, and then averaged across the five tests to give the following results (shown here for a minimum confidence threshold of 50%, which is the default for results shown to customers):

Population Precision (%) Recall (%)
Sub-Saharan African9998
West African9899
Senegambian & Guinean9495
Ghanaian, Liberian & Sierra Leonean9687
Nigerian9199
Northern East African9792
Sudanese9482
Ethiopian & Eritrean9397
Somali9991
Congolese & Southern East African9799
Angolan &: Congolese9899
Southern East African9596
African Hunter-Gatherer9886
Indigenous American9893
East Asian9899
North Asian5790
Siberian9093
Manchurian & Mongolian3880
Chinese9798
Northern Chinese & Tibetan8295
Southern Chinese & Taiwanese8873
South Chinese8892
Vietnamese9696
Filipino & Austronesian9488
Indonesian, Khmer, Thai & Myanma9460
Chinese Dai8997
Japanese10099
Korean9699
European9999
Northern European9696
British & Irish9588
Finnish9495
French & German7980
Scandinavian9190
Southern European9090
Greek & Balkan8980
Spanish & Portuguese9096
Italian8786
Sardinian8593
Eastern European8688
Ashkenazi Jewish9998
Western Asian & North African9595
Northern West Asian8391
Cypriot9593
Anatolian8964
Iranian, Caucasian & Mesopotamian6693
Arab, Egyptian & Levantine9485
Peninsular Arab8869
Levantine9369
Egyptian7888
Coptic Egyptian9195
North African9789
Central & South Asian9896
Central Asian8744
Northern Indian & Pakistani8187
Bengali & Northeast Indian9294
Gujarati Patidar9897
Southern Indian Subgroup9384
Southern Indian & Sri Lankan7893
Malayali Subgroup9375
Melanesian9896

This table shows that our precision numbers are high across the board, mostly above 90 percent, and rarely dipping below 75 percent. That means that when the system assigns an ancestry to a piece of DNA, that assignment is very likely to be accurate. You can also see that as you move up from the sub-regional level (e.g., British & Irish) to the regional level (e.g., Northern European) to the continental level (e.g., European), the precision approaches 100 percent.

It is important to realize that poor recall doesn't mean bad results. Some populations, like Sardinian, are just hard to tell apart from others. When Ancestry Composition fails to assign Sardinian DNA, this doesn't mean that DNA is incorrectly assigned to something else, like Italian. If it were, then the Italian population would have poor precision. Instead, Ancestry Composition often assigns Sardinian DNA to the Broadly Southern European or Broadly European populations.

The Future of Ancestry Composition

Ancestry Composition has a modular design. This was intentional, because it allows us to improve individual components of the system—like Eagle's phasing reference database or the SVM reference populations—without affecting any of the other steps in the analysis pipeline.

We hope to update Ancestry Composition regularly. When we improve some component of the system or upgrade the reference datasets, your results will automatically be updated. You will be able to see a list of those updates in the Change Log at the bottom of your Ancestry Composition Scientific Details.

Updated August 2022