“similarly, at the end of a hit song’s period of extreme popularity, a large proportion of the population will recognize that song,” rosati says.
researchers obtained data from a database containing 1.4 billion individual song downloads from 33 countries through nokia cellphones over a seven-year period, and included genres such as dance, metal, pop, reggae, country and western and electronica. they focused their analysis on song downloads in great britain.
they determined the contagious processes that a mathematical model reveals for infectious diseases might also be at work in driving song popularity. that is, both music and infectious disease depend on social connections to spread through populations.
“whether it is a disease infecting many people or a song becoming popular, some kind of social contact is required,” says earn.
“for an infectious disease, this is generally physical contact or breathing the air near an infected person. for a song, the contact might involve physical proximity, but it might also be virtual contact through social media. in either case, transmission relies on social networks.”
for example, the modelling suggests fans of electronica share songs more actively or more effectively than other genres such as pop. the social network of electronica fans might be more strongly connected than other fan communities or they may be more passionate about their favourite songs and bands.