Breaking the Code: Multi-level Learning in the Eurovision Song Contest
Breaking the Code: Multi-level Learning in the Eurovision Song Contest
Organizations learn from the market, political, and societal responses to their actions. While in some cases both the actions and responses take place in an open manner, in many others, some aspects may be hidden from external observers. The Eurovision Song Contest offers an interesting example to study organizational level learning at two levels: organizers and participants. We find evidence for changes in the rules of the Contest in response to undesired outcomes such as runaway winners. We also find strong evidence of participant learning in the characteristics of competing songs over the 70-years of the Contest. English has been adopted as the lingua franca of the competing songs and pop has become the standard genre. Number of words of lyrics has also grown in response to this collective learning. Remarkably, we find evidence that four participating countries have chosen to ignore the "lesson" that English lyrics increase winning probability. This choice is consistent with utility functions that award greater value to featuring national language than to winning the Contest. Indeed, we find evidence that some countries -- but not Germany -- appear to be less susceptible to "peer" pressure. These observations appear to be valid beyond Eurovision.
Luís A. Nunes Amaral、Arthur Capozzi、Dirk Helbing
文化理论信息传播、知识传播
Luís A. Nunes Amaral,Arthur Capozzi,Dirk Helbing.Breaking the Code: Multi-level Learning in the Eurovision Song Contest[EB/OL].(2025-05-15)[2025-07-16].https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.11555.点此复制
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