It seems sliek a lots of dead people in the groupd. How do I do the acturearials caluctions for normals? For exmpale: if there are 100 people born in 1959 that are stil alive in 1972, waht percentage should statistically be aliuve todya?
I guess you would find the average life expectancy for someone born in 1959, and go from that. To be more accurate you would need to know the male/female population of the 100, as females seem to live longer on average. There's probably some distribution curve where you increase the chances of carking it as you get older.
I read that smoking alone reduces lifespan by an average of 15 years.
Interestingly, the average lifespan is NOT how long the average person can expect to live to since that average includes many who die young from accidents or hazardous hobbies/occupations.
Tannin said:To calculate the real average lifspan, simply take the median. Say you have 100 people. The average lifespan is the age of the 50th person to die. Even an ape could work that one out.
wikipedia said:Popular explanation
The difference between the median and mean is illustrated in a simple example. Suppose 19 paupers and 1 billionaire are in a room. Everyone removes all money from their pockets and puts it on a table. Each pauper puts $5 on the table; the billionaire puts $1 billion (that is, $109) there. The total is then $1,000,000,095. If that money is divided equally among the 20 persons, each gets $50,000,004.75. That amount is the mean (or "average") amount of money that the 20 persons brought into the room. But the median amount is $5, since one may divide the group into two groups of 10 persons each, and say that everyone in the first group brought in no more than $5, and each person in the second group brought in no less than $5. In a sense, the median is the amount that the typical person brought in. By contrast, the mean (or "average") is not at all typical, since no one present—pauper or billionaire—brought in an amount approximating $50,000,004.75.