Got a good #statistician challenge for a fan of #actuary #actuarial studies, #age and #aging — how is this line best described?
It's all about a funny inverse relationship to "risk of death" (within a year) to the "added life expectancy" (bonus days of life) you can expect as you make it to your next birthday — while others around you do not.
Congratulations, you made through the Filter — you're one of the stronger ones, on principle.
There's clearly a well-known thing of "it's great to be 10", where the lifelong measurement of risk-of-dying is at its all-time lowest.
But, so, what's this flattening at age 20 through 30? Only seen easily in logarithmic scale … but in fact, if looking at women only, it goes *DOWN* slightly — what!?
I need help translating this into plain English too: Does it mean a 30-year-old woman is more sensible than a 21-year-old woman?
I can see how the teenage years filter very quickly, and the years after 30+ are normal. But how would you describe it?