Monday, May 23, 2022
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Science
  • Opinion
  • Technology
    • Android News
    • Best Android Apps
    • iOS News
  • Lifestyle
WORLDZZNEWS
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Science
  • Opinion
  • Technology
    • Android News
    • Best Android Apps
    • iOS News
  • Lifestyle
No Result
View All Result
WORLDZZNEWS
No Result
View All Result

Eurovision 2022: Which countries will do well – according to science

admin by admin
1 week ago
in Science
0
Eurovision 2022: Which countries will do well – according to science

Related posts

Why Your Body May Need to Shed Some Tears, Even if You Don’t Feel Sad

Why Your Body May Need to Shed Some Tears, Even if You Don’t Feel Sad

May 21, 2022
Monkeypox: First genome from latest outbreak shows links to 2018 strain

Monkeypox: First genome from latest outbreak shows links to 2018 strain

May 21, 2022


Neuroscientists measured 75 volunteers’ physiological responses while they watched eight countries’ performances to predict which songs will do well in the popular vote



Mind



14 May 2022

By Jason Arunn Murugesu

Cornelia Jakobs performing Sweden’s entry for this year’s Eurovision Song Contest

Filippo Alfero/Getty Images

Sweden will be one of the most popular countries in the public vote of tonight’s Eurovision Song Contest, according to researchers who analysed peoples’ physiological responses to eight of the performances.

Daniel Richardson at University College London and his colleagues asked 75 people with an average age of 30 to watch eight nations’ entries for this year’s Eurovision finals: Norway, Germany, Spain, Poland, Italy, Australia, Sweden and France.

They monitored the heart rate and skin conductance levels of the participants as they watched the performances. This was then used to make predictions about how well each of these countries will do in tonight’s public vote.

The researchers chose these nations as four of them were guaranteed to be in the finals due to Eurovision rules, while Sweden and Australia have a good record of making it into the final round and Poland and Norway were tipped by bookmakers.

Ukraine wasn’t included as it is the runaway favourite this year. “No one would have been impressed if we predicted that Ukraine would win,” says Richardson.

The predictions are based on the team’s idea that the more similar the heart rate and skin conductance levels among a group of people when they watch the same performance, the more engaging that performance must be.

Richardson and his team have previously found that the heartbeat of a crowd can be synchronised when people watch a live musical together. Skin conductance reflects how much someone is sweating, which is stimulated by adrenaline.

“Broadly speaking, these measures are measures of arousal,” says Richardson. “But if you’re just looking at whether it goes up and down, you can’t really tell if that’s good or bad.”

Divergent patterns of physiological responses during a particular performance suggest that the act isn’t very engaging, he says.

“When something’s really gripping, everyone’s brains are processing the same stimulus and so you’ll have physiological synchrony,” he says. “Whereas we’re all bored in different ways – someone may be staring at a window, while someone’s going to be kicking their feet, and so they’ll have divergent mental states. Or at least that’s our working hypothesis.”

The researchers found that their predictions based on skin conductance levels didn’t match up exactly with those based on heart rate. Richardson speculates that heart rate similarity may tell us how emotionally engaging a performance is, whereas skin conductance may be more of an indicator of how engaged they are by a performance’s narrative – though he emphasises that this is still speculative.

“They’re coupled, but only loosely – the truth is we don’t quite know what they tell us just yet,” says Richardson. To make their overall predictions, the researchers simply averaged out the two types of prediction.

Of the countries looked at in the study, the team anticipates that Sweden will place the highest in the public vote, followed by Australia and Italy. Norway will get the lowest score, the researchers predict.

The team plans to use the outcome of this year’s Eurovision to help refine the way such data is analysed and improve predictions for next year.

“I love this study so much,” says Sarah Garfinkel at University College London. “I think the authors have been really brave putting their predictions out there like this.”

“I think studies like this can highlight the biology of empathy and show the true essence of human nature,” she says. “We are a social species.”

Garfinkel won’t say whether the team’s predictions will be correct, but she thinks their approach has merit. “I’m really confident that they’re on the right track,” she says.

Reference: OSF Registries, DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/MYQKH

More on these topics:

Previous Post

Thousands Gather at Marches for Abortion Rights

Next Post

Elon Musk wants to know how many fake accounts Twitter has, but experts say his approach is all wrong

Next Post
Elon Musk wants to know how many fake accounts Twitter has, but experts say his approach is all wrong

Elon Musk wants to know how many fake accounts Twitter has, but experts say his approach is all wrong

BROWSE BY CATEGORIES

  • Android News (388)
  • Best Android Apps (374)
  • Business (11,475)
  • Culture (460)
  • iOS News (402)
  • Lifestyle (1,456)
  • News (2,320)
  • Opinion (5,502)
  • Politics (9,339)
  • Science (7,395)
  • Technology (1,494)
  • Uncategorized (48)

BROWSE BY TOPICS

Adobe Android App Apple Apple Computer Apple Computer Inc. Apple Inc Apple TV Apps App Store Galaxy Google iBook iBook Store iMac i mac Intel ios 9 ios9 iPad iPhone iphone 6 iphone 6s iPod classic iPod nano iPod shuffle iPod touch iTunes iTunes Store mac book MacBook Pro mac osx mac os x Mac Pro Magic Mouse Magic Pad Microsoft Nokia Nvidia Research in Motion RIM Samsung Series Top Watch

Recent News

  • Why Your Body May Need to Shed Some Tears, Even if You Don’t Feel Sad
  • Monkeypox: First genome from latest outbreak shows links to 2018 strain
  • Video: Tornado in Western Germany Injures Dozens
  • Giuliani interviewed for hours by 1/6 committee
  • Australia election: How Scott Morrison ran out of miracles
  • Climate Change Has Been Killing Rainforest Trees For Longer Than We Realized
  • Russia bans 963 Americans, including Biden and Harris — but not Trump

Category

  • Android News (388)
  • Best Android Apps (374)
  • Business (11,475)
  • Culture (460)
  • iOS News (402)
  • Lifestyle (1,456)
  • News (2,320)
  • Opinion (5,502)
  • Politics (9,339)
  • Science (7,395)
  • Technology (1,494)
  • Uncategorized (48)
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Condition
  • Disclaimer

© 2020 Worldzz News - All Rights reserved by The World Newzz.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Science
  • Opinion
  • Technology
    • Android News
    • Best Android Apps
    • iOS News
  • Lifestyle

© 2020 Worldzz News - All Rights reserved by The World Newzz.