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Rosaria Conte (1952–2016)

By Mario Paolucci

This is the “header piece” for a short series on those who have been awarded the “Rosaria Conte Outstanding Award for Social Simulation” awarded by the European Social Simulation Association every two years. It makes no sense to describe those who have got this award without information about the person which it is named after, so this is about her.

Rosaria Conte was one of the first researchers in Europe to recognize and champion agent-based social simulation. She became a leader of what would later become the ESSA community in the 1990s, chairing the 1997 ICCS&SS – First International Conference on Computer Simulation and the Social Sciences in Cortona, Italy, and co-editing with Nigel Gilbert the book Artificial Societies (Gilbert & Conte, 1995). With her unique approach, her open approach to interdisciplinarity, and her charisma, she inspired and united a generation of researchers who still pursue her scientific endeavour.

Known as a relentless advocate for cognitive agents in the agent-based modeling community, Conte stood firmly against the keep-it-simple principle. Instead, she argued that plausible agents—those capable of explaining complex social phenomena where immergence (Castelfranchi, 1998; Conte et al., 2009) is as critical as emergence—require explicit, theory-backed representations of cognitive artifacts (Conte & Paolucci, 2011).

Born in Foggia, Italy, Rosaria graduated in philosophy at the University of Rome La Sapienza in 1976, to later join the Italian National Research Council (Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, CNR). In the ‘90s, she founded and directed the Laboratory of Agent-Based Social Simulation (LABSS) at the Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC-CNR). Under her leadership, LABSS became an internationally renowned hub for research on agent-based modeling and social simulation. Conte’s work at LABSS focused on the development of computational models to study complex social phenomena, including cooperation, reputation, and social norms.

Influenced by collaborators such as Cristiano Castelfranchi and Domenico Parisi, whose guidance helped shape her studies of social behavior through computational models, she proposed the integration of cognitive and social theories into agent-based models. Unlike approaches that treated agents as simple rule-followers, Rosaria emphasized the importance of incorporating cognitive and emotional processes into simulations. Her 1995 book, Cognitive and Social Action (Conte & Castelfranchi, 1995), became a landmark text in the field. The book employed their characteristic pre-formal approach—using logic formulas in order to illustrate relationships between concepts, without a fully developed system of postulates or theorem-proving tools. The reason for this approach was, as they noted, that “formalism sometimes disrupts implicit knowledge and theories” (p. 14). The ideas in the book, together with her attention to the dependance relations between agents (Sichman et al., 1998) would go on to inspire Rosaria’s approach to simulation throughout her career.

Rosaria’s research extended to the study of reputation and social norms. For reputation (Conte & Paolucci, 2002), an attempt to create a specific, cognitive-based model has been made with the Repage approach (Sabater et al., 2006). Regarding social norms (Andrighetto et al., 2007), she explored how norms emerge, spread, and influence individual and collective behavior. This work had practical implications for a range of fields, including organizational behavior, policy design, and conflict resolution. She had a key role in the largest recent attempt to create a center for complexity and social sciences, the FuturICT project (Conte et al., 2012).

Rosaria Conte held several leadership positions. She served as President of the European Social Simulation Society (ESSA) from 2010 to 2012. Additionally, she was President of the Italian Cognitive Science Association (AISC) from 2008 to 2009, member of the Italian Bioethics Committee (CNB) from 2013 to 2016, and Vice President of the Italian CNR Scientific Council.

You can watch an interview with Rosaria about FuturICT here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghgzt5zgGP8

References

Andrighetto, G., Campenni, M., Conte, R., & Paolucci, M. (2007). On the immergence of norms: A normative agent architecture. Proceedings of AAAI Symposium, Social and Organizational Aspects of Intelligence. http://www.aaai.org/Library/Symposia/Fall/fs07-04.php

Castelfranchi, C. (1998). Simulating with Cognitive Agents: The Importance of Cognitive Emergence. Proceedings of the First International Workshop on Multi-Agent Systems and Agent-Based Simulation, 26–44. http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=665578

Conte, R., Andrighetto, G., & Campennì, M. (2009). The Immergence of Norms in Agent Worlds. In H. Aldewereld, V. Dignum, & G. Picard (Eds.), Engineering Societies in the Agents World X< (pp. 1–14). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-10203-5_1

Conte, R., & Castelfranchi, C. (1995). Cognitive Social Action. London: UCL Press.

Conte, R., Gilbert, N., Bonelli, G., Cioffi-Revilla, C., Deffuant, G., Kertesz, J., Loreto, V., Moat, S., Nadal, J.-P., Sanchez, A., Nowak, A., Flache, A., San Miguel, M., & Helbing, D. (2012). Manifesto of computational social science. The European Physical Journal Special Topics, 214(1), 325–346. https://doi.org/10.1140/epjst/e2012-01697-8

Conte, R., & Paolucci, M. (2002). Reputation in Artificial Societies—Social Beliefs for Social Order. Springer. https://iris.unibs.it/retrieve/ddc633e2-a83d-4e2e-e053-3705fe0a4c80/Review%20of%20Conte%2C%20Rosaria%20and%20Paolucci%2C%20Mario_%20Reputation%20in%20Artificial%20Socie.pdf

Conte, R., & Paolucci, M. (2011). On Agent Based Modelling and Computational Social Science. Social Science Research Network Working Paper Series. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00668

Gilbert, N., & Conte, R. (Eds.). (1995). Artificial Societies: The Computer Simulation of Social Life. Taylor & Francis, Inc. https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.12657/24305/1005826.pdf

Sabater, J., Paolucci, M., & Conte, R. (2006). Repage: REPutation and ImAGE Among Limited Autonomous Partners. Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, 9<(2). http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/9/2/3.html

Sichman, J. S., Conte, R., Demazeau, Y., & Castelfranchi, C. (1998). A social reasoning mechanism based on dependence networks. 416–420.


Paolucci, M. (2023) Rosaria Conte (1952-2016). Review of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, 11 Feb 2023. https://rofasss.org/2025/02/11/rosariaconte/


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