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Posts feedLogistical nightmares
Double trouble
Interesting times
Table talk
Size isn't everything
Great Expectations
When fitting statistical models, a number of features are commonly assumed by users. Chief amongst these assumptions is that the expected number of events according to the model will equal the actual number in the data. This strikes most people as a thoroughly reasonable expectation. Reasonable, but often wrong.
Confounding compounding
A likely story
The foundation for most modern statistical inference is the log-likelihood function. By maximising the value of this function, we find the maximum-likelihood estimate (MLE) for a given parameter, i.e. the most likely value given the model and data. For models with more than one parameter, we find the set of values which jointly maximise the log-likelihood.
Do we need standard tables any more?
Actuaries are long used to using standard tables. In the UK these are created by the Continuous Mortality Investigation Bureau (CMIB), and the use of certain tables is often prescribed in legislation. As actuaries increasingly move to using statistical models for mortality, it is perhaps natural that they should first consider incorporating standard tables into these models. But are standard tables necessary, or even useful, in such a context?