Troitzsch is a pioneer in the methodological development of
computer-based simulation in the
social sciences, especially the method of
agent-based modeling in the social sciences. In the field of computational social sciences, Troitzsch's focus lies on the one hand on agent-based modeling and on the other hand on
microsimulation. He published one of the most important textbooks in that area "Simulation for the Social Scientist", now in its second edition (together with
Nigel Gilbert). Further, he was among the founders of the Research Committee on Modelling and Simulation of the German Sociological Association and the SimSoc Consortium, which publishes the
Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation. he was the first Treasurer of the European Social Simulation Association. He has been involved in several research projects funded by the
European Union, for instance Freshwater Integrated Resources Management with Agents (FIRMA) and OCOPOMO . Troitzsch organized also several conferences in the social sciences, for instance the third annual conference of the European Social Simulation Association, (ESSA 2005), Epistemological Perspectives on Simulation (EPOS) in 2004, the 26th European Conference on Modelling and Simulation (ECMS) and, for twelve years, an annual summer school on social simulation (the Advanced Simulation Workshop/Zuma Workshop on Simulation for Social Scientists). ==References==