What use statisticians and actuaries when the world is being transformed by modern data-analysis techniques? What hope for clunking humans in the era of Big Data (Facebook sells data which influences US presidential elections), of Artificial Intelligence (China can identify disliked racial groups through automatic facial recognition technology), and of Machine Learning (Tesla can analyse patterns to drive your car for you)?
Let’s call these modern data trends Algorithmic Data Science, a phrase I’ve chosen to capture all three in one acronym “ADS”. (Algorithmic in the sense you code it all into a computer then sit back and let it do its thing.)
Put aside the obvious ethical concerns of my three examples (though this should give us pause), and reflect on what the trends tell us about the way the world is moving.
There’s a bandwagony mood about. It is all exciting and modern and genuinely revolutionary, but is there too much expectation of ADS’s reach? The change-power and range of ADS opportunities can lead to blind obsession, with superficial futurists prophesying the end of humans analysing data.
It seems ADS is going to replace the quantitative professions (like actuaries). Correct?
I disagree. And I hope to spend the next 600 words convincing you of the same.