Rose Dieng-Kuntz (27 March 1956 â 30 June 2008) was a Senegalese computer scientist specialising in artificial intelligence. She was the first African woman to enroll in the ÃÂcole polytechnique.
Rose Sophie Fatima Dieng-Kuntz was born on March 27, 1956, in Dakar, Senegal. She excelled in her studies at Van Vollenhoven High School in Dakar, where she won several first prizes in the Senegalese General Competition and obtained her baccalaureate with highest honors.
In 1976, at the age of 20, she became the first African woman admitted to the ÃÂcole polytechnique in France. She continued her studies at the ÃÂcole Nationale Supérieure des Télécommunications (now Télécom Paris), where she earned an engineering degree in 1980. Dieng-Kuntz also completed a DEA (diploma of advanced studies) in computer science, followed by a PhD at the University of Paris-Sud.
Her professional career began in 1985 at INRIA (National Institute for Research in Computer Science and Control) in France.
In 1992, she became only the second woman to lead a research project at INRIA. Her research focused on knowledge sharing on the web, particularly in the early days of the semantic web.
Her area of specialisation for her PhD was the specification of parallelism. She worked for the National Institute for Research in Computer Science and Control (INRIA) in France, a French national research institution focusing on computer science, control theory and applied mathematics, where her research specialisation was on the sharing of knowledge over the World Wide Web.
Her last research focused on knowledge management and the semantic Web. She was active in reaching out to students, and female students in particular, about her passion for science. In her words:
She died in 2008 after a long illness. Her death received national media coverage. France's Minister of Higher Education and Research, Valérie Pécresse, expressed sadness, and released a statement announcing the death of Rose Dieng Kuntz: "France and the world of science have just lost a visionary mind and an immense talent".
In 2026, Dieng-Kuntz was announced as one of 72 historical women in STEM whose names have been proposed to be added to the 72 men already celebrated on the Eiffel Tower. The plan was announced by the Mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo following the recommendations of a committee led by Isabelle Vauglin of ' and Jean-François Martins, representing the operating company which runs the Eiffel Tower.