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Answer for the clue "One collecting data that's intact, as it is after adjustment ", 12 letters:
statistician

Alternative clues for the word statistician

Word definitions for statistician in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
A statistician is someone who works with theoretical or applied statistics . The profession exists in both the private and public sectors . It is common to combine statistical knowledge with expertise in other subjects.

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 A person who compiles, interprets, or study statistics 2 (context mathematics English) a mathematician with a specialty of statistics

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1801, from statistics + -ian .

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Statistician \Stat`is*ti"cian\ (st[a^]t`[i^]s*t[i^]sh"an), n. One versed in statistics; one who collects and classifies facts for statistics.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Accountants, personnel administrators, economists, data processing experts and statisticians are all experts in a specialised field of work. ▪ Arguments or wars had, some group of statisticians had calculated, taken up to 89.7% ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a mathematician who specializes in statistics [syn: mathematical statistician ] someone versed in the collection and interpretation of numerical data (especially someone who uses statistics to calculate insurance premiums) [syn: actuary ]

Usage examples of statistician.

The answer depended on so many factors that three generations of statisticians and their computers had done little but lay down rules so vague that the insurance companies still shivered with apprehension when the great meteoroid swarms went sweeping like gales through the orbits of the inner worlds.

The efforts of the statisticians had resulted in tables showing approximate collision probabilities at various radiuses from the sun for meteoroids down to masses of a few milligrams.

Foster is a statistician who is trying to discover how fads begin so that her company, HiTek, can predict them and perhaps influence them.

The gentry and meritocrats, however, according to some statisticians, have apparently suffered substantial losses in intellectual capacity.

Computers and those who serve them, humanplayer statisticians and psephologists, the stochastic community who are in charge, reducing world and problems to collection of weighted maybes, delivering not what is needed so much as what computers able to do.

The movement gradually took a great extension, and on a small territory, the Taurida statisticians found 161 villages in which communal ownership had been introduced by the peasant proprietors themselves, chiefly in the years 1855-1885, in lieu of individual ownership.

Lists of such works which came under the notice of the zemstvo statisticians will be found in V.

They were highly trained mathematicians and statisticians and scientists who had abandoned whatever they were doing at Harvard or Stanford or MIT to make a killing on Wall Street.

Do not some of you remember that I have had to fight this private-pestilence question against a scepticism which sneered in the face of a mass of evidence such as the calm statisticians of the Insurance office could not listen to without horror and indignation?

According to the most trustworthy statistics the number of adult Dullards in the United States is but little short of thirty millions, including the statisticians.

If I make an exception for you, I'll have technicians in Computer Center wanting the same thing so Aunt Minnie can bring them their lunch, and statisticians in the Sensitive Records Section who want their girl friends to pick them up from work, and Ghu knows where it will all end.

She was one of the best statisticians they had, a whiz with the variety of desktop computers that did most of their tracking, modeling, and record-keeping.

I am disappointed by what it tells me, but at least I am now in a position to lure other people to boast of the walking they do in an ordinary day's work, so that I may contradict them, and gain face as a statistician.

The result is to convert Platonia into what statisticians call a `Markov chain', which is just like the list of transition probabilities for snakes and ladders, but more general.

For the answer depended on so many factors that three generations of statisticians had done little but lay down rules so vague that the insurance companies still shivered with apprehension when the great meteor showers went sweeping like a gale through the orbits of the inner worlds.