Actuary in a sentence as a noun

Even worse would be "an actuary who lives in SF."

"They're such high risk, that no actuary will quote them a reasonable price.

If you are an actuary you are already a data scientist.

I'm guessing it's saying that the new 'data scientist' is more an actuary than a statistician.

Nothing special about it, and we don't have a lawyer's day or an actuary's day or a guy who designs the machine that makes tiles for bathrooms day.

The guy was apparently a healthcare actuary which gives him a lot more insight than most of us. And I think it's not too controversial that ACA had a lot in common with the Romney/heritage plans.

Just because its fun to play "worst case scenario"...An actuary finds a link between late night cell phone usage and mental illness X. They determine that given your cell phone usage pattern, you have an 50% chance of illness X. Such information is sold to insurance companies, employment background check companies, yada yada

I prefer a system of government in which I can trust my welfare to the good nature and honesty of bureaucrats rather than cold, evil numerical equations, actuary tables, risk profiles and budgets.

Those protections stifle innovation... can we not ask for them too loudly please just in case somebody gets an idea for an IT Professional Institute?The actuarial profession is protected here, and **** does that make it difficult to get a decent actuary who can also program.

Does the 15000% YOY increase in "data scientist" job postings reflect an actual greater demand for data scientists, or a trendy retitling of vacancies that were previously give titles like "market analyst", "data product manager", "operational research analyst" or even "actuary" and "economist"?

Actuary definitions

noun

someone versed in the collection and interpretation of numerical data (especially someone who uses statistics to calculate insurance premiums)

See also: statistician