Rosaria Conte (14 April 1954 in Rome – 5 July 2016 in Rome) was an Italian social scientist. She was the head of the Laboratory of Agent Based Social Simulation at the ISTC-CNR in Rome, which hosts an interdisciplinary research group working at the intersection among cognitive, social and computational sciences.[1] She was President of European Social Simulation Association and AISC (Italian Cognitive Science Association). Rosaria Conte published more than 130 works among volumes, papers in scientific journals, conference proceedings and book chapters. Her scientific activity aims at explaining social behaviour among intelligent autonomous systems, and modeling the dynamics of norms and norm-enforcement mechanisms (including reputation and gossip). Her research was characterized by a highly interdisciplinary approach, at the intersection among cognitive, social and computational sciences. In her name, the European Social Simulation Association assigns every other year the Outstanding Contribution Award for Social Simulation, whose first recipients are Nigel Gilbert and Uri Wilensky.
Career
Conte was born in Foggia. She studied philosophy at the Sapienza University of Rome. In 1980 she received a Postdoctoral Fellowship at Department of Sociology, UCSD, USA, under the supervision of the sociologist Aaron Cicourel. In 1985 she completed her education with a visiting period at the Department of Psychology of the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USA.
Rosaria Conte's scientific interest focused on Social order, Agent Theory, Emergence and the Evolution of Social institutions, Deontic logic, Social simulation and Cultural evolution. From 1982 to 2001 she was Junior Scientist at the Institute of Psychology (IP, now Institute of Cognitive Science and Technology, ISTC) of Cnr. In 1998 she founded the Laboratory of Agent Based Social Simulation (LABSS), at ISTC-CNR. In the same period she started teaching Social Psychology at the University of Siena.
In 2001 she became Honorary Associate Researcher at Center for Policy Making of Business School, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. In 2006 she was elected President of AISC (Italian Cognitive Science Association), and in 2008 became President of the European Social Simulation Association. In 2015 she became Vice Head of the Psychology Faculty at the Università telematica internazionale Uninettuno.
Rosaria Conte was Vice President of the Scientific Committee of the National Research Council (Italy) and Member of the Italian National Bioethics Committee. She died in Rome in 2016.[2][3]
Campennì, M., Cecconi, F., Andrighetto, G., Conte, R., (2010). Norm and Social Compliance A Computational Study. The International Journal of Agent Technologies and Systems (IJATS), 2 (1), 50–62. http://www.igi-global.com/bookstore/article.aspx?titleid=39032
Pitt, J., Conte, R., Dung, P., Sartor, G., Troitzsch, K., Draief, M., Andrighetto, G. (2010). Modular Argumentation and the Dynamics of (Il)Legality: A Position Statement on ICT for Governance and Policy Modelling. Best Contributions on the State of the Art and Future of ICT for Governance and Policy Modelling. https://web.archive.org/web/20120501094125/http://crossroad.epu.ntua.gr/files/2010/04/13_moduleg.pdf
Campenní, Marco; Andrighetto, Giulia; Cecconi, Federico; Conte, Rosaria (December 2009). "Normal = Normative? The role of intelligent agents in norm innovation". Mind & Society. 8 (2): 153–172. CiteSeerX10.1.1.215.1611. doi:10.1007/s11299-009-0063-4. S2CID52073203.
Paolucci, M; Conte, R; Marmo, S; Picascia, S; Quattrociocchi, W; Eymann, T; Balke, T; König, S; Jager, W; Broekhuizen, T.L.J; Trampe, D; Tuk, M.A; Sabater, J; Pinyol, I; Villatoro, D; Brito, I (2009). "Social knowledge for eGovernance: Theory and technology of reputation". eRep booklet, EU sixth framework programme, Priority 7, Citizens and governance in the knowledge based society. OCLC6893138284.
Quattrociocchi, Walter; Paolucci, Mario; Conte, Rosaria (2009). "Image and Reputation Coping Differently with Massive Informational Cheating". Visioning and Engineering the Knowledge Society. A Web Science Perspective. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 5736. pp. 574–583. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-04754-1_58. ISBN978-3-642-04753-4.
Paolucci, M.; Conte, R.; Di Tosto, G. (2006). "A Model of Social Organization and the Evolution of Food Sharing in Vampire Bats". Adaptive Behavior. 14 (3): 223–239. doi:10.1177/105971230601400305. S2CID21920618.
Conte R. (2003). Review of simulating organizations: Computational models of institutions and groups. Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, N° 6. http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/6/2/reviews/conte.html