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Dive into the research topics where Viviana Amati is active.

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Featured researches published by Viviana Amati.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Classic Maya Bloodletting and the Cultural Evolution of Religious Rituals: Quantifying Patterns of Variation in Hieroglyphic Texts

Jessica Munson; Viviana Amati; Mark Collard; Martha J. Macri

Religious rituals that are painful or highly stressful are hypothesized to be costly signs of commitment essential for the evolution of complex society. Yet few studies have investigated how such extreme ritual practices were culturally transmitted in past societies. Here, we report the first study to analyze temporal and spatial variation in bloodletting rituals recorded in Classic Maya (ca. 250–900 CE) hieroglyphic texts. We also identify the sociopolitical contexts most closely associated with these ancient recorded rituals. Sampling an extensive record of 2,480 hieroglyphic texts, this study identifies every recorded instance of the logographic sign for the word ch’ahb’ that is associated with ritual bloodletting. We show that documented rituals exhibit low frequency whose occurrence cannot be predicted by spatial location. Conversely, network ties better capture the distribution of bloodletting rituals across the southern Maya region. Our results indicate that bloodletting rituals by Maya nobles were not uniformly recorded, but were typically documented in association with antagonistic statements and may have signaled royal commitments among connected polities.


Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 2018

Reconstructing Archaeological Networks with Structural Holes

Viviana Amati; Termeh Shafie; Ulrik Brandes

Model-based reconstruction is an approach to infer network structures where they cannot be observed. For archaeological networks, several models based on assumptions concerning distance among sites, site size, or costs and benefits have been proposed to infer missing ties. Since these assumptions are formulated at a dyadic level, they do not provide means to express dependencies among ties and therefore include less plausible network scenarios. In this paper we investigate the use of network models that explicitly incorporate tie dependence. In particular, we consider exponential random graph models, and show how they can be applied to reconstruct networks coherent with Burts arguments on closure and structural holes (Burt 2001). The approach is illustrated on data from the Middle Bronze Age in the Aegean.


GENUS | 2011

Individual, dyadic and network effects in friendship relations among Italian and foreign schoolmates

Giulia Rivellini; Laura Terzera; Viviana Amati


Social Indicators Research | 2015

Potential and Effective Support Networks of Young Italian Adults

Viviana Amati; Giulia Rivellini; Susanna Zaccarin


Journal de la Société Française de Statistique & revue de statistique appliquée | 2015

Estimation of Stochastic actor-oriented models for the evolution of networks by generalized method of moments

Viviana Amati; Felix Schönenberger; Tom A. B. Snijders


Social Indicators Research | 2017

Relational Resources of Individuals Living in Couple: Evidence from an Italian Survey

Viviana Amati; Silvia Meggiolaro; Giulia Rivellini; Susanna Zaccarin


Giornate di Studio sulla Popolazione 2015 | 2014

Relational resources in Italian couples. Evidence from a national survey

Viviana Amati; Silvia Meggiolaro; Susanna Zaccarin


Statistics and demography, the legacy of Corrado Gini | 2015

Network-based Sources of Social Capital. Evidence from the Italian Multipurpose Survey

Viviana Amati; Silvia Meggiolaro; Giulia Rivellini; Susanna Zaccarin


Archive | 2015

Estimation of Stochastic actor-oriented models for the evolution of networks by generalized method of moments Titre: Estimation des modèles stochastiques orienté par l'acteur pour l'évolution des réseaux par la méthode des moments généralisées

Viviana Amati; Felix Schönenberger; Tom A. B. Snijders


Research Paper Series N. 6 | 2013

Potential and effective support network of young Italian adults

Giulia Rivellini; Viviana Amati; Susanna Zaccarin

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Giulia Rivellini

The Catholic University of America

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Giulia Rivellini

The Catholic University of America

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Jessica Munson

University of California

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