You've found your unicorn! An applied math, statistics, computer science trifecta. I've spent the last twenty years working on all sorts of data and applied science problems, building frameworks that deliver cogent and actionable insights.
Before we dive in, a quick note on this website. It's designed to deliver an adaptive granularity experience; that is, you select the level of detail.
The Institute for Disease Modeling uses sophisticated statistical machinery to track polio outbreaks and forecast vaccine demand across Africa and the world.
Conviva is a B2B, privately held company in the streaming video analytics space. They provide a client-side, QoE reporting layer, and a corresponding, backend analytics service, for many of the streaming video platforms in use today. One of Conviva's core products is Stream ID which aggregates devices into households. At a high level, it addresses a community detection problem involving devices, IP addresses, and the inherently unstable labels used to identify these entities.
I hung out my own shingle. This was my consulting company.
In 2011, while preparing for an IPO, Zillow released a new and improved Zestimate algorithm for assessing single family homes. However, the algorithm proved to be unstable, and the blowback in the press was severe.
In 2010, Globys was in the mobile marketing space, providing software for up- and cross-sell opportunities.
In 2006, Numerix offered a product that allowed financial institutions to price exotic derivatives based on interest and foreign exchange rates. Underpinning these complex financial assets were arbitrage-free (martingale) measures and stochastic differential equations, and the raison d'être of their software was to expose an API to this numerical machienry in a familiar, Excel workbook.
MIT Lincoln Laboratory is a government lab that researches and develops RADAR technologies.
I dropped out of my PhD program in statistics. I was enthusiastic about computational finance, but six months after switching departments to pursue this course of research, my advisor left on a two year sabbatical. I developed an interest in optimization and started on another project. That fell apart when the professor I wanted to work with died in a tragic kayaking accident. The last chapter was statistical genetics, but by then, I was out of gas and industry was calling. I determined that it wasn't meant to be, made the tough decision, and changed course.