I've noticed a number of edits with revision summaries such as the following.
- hit the wrong dang vote button. +1
- minor edit to undo upvote (see commments)
- Minor edit to undo downvote. This doesn't cover all cases (no upvote) but encouraging editing is good (no downvote)
- edit to undo accidental downvote
- not a feature, and minor edit so I can upvote instead of downvote
- fixed small error (down-vote -> up-vote)
- Fixed naming (but basically a dummy edit to allow me to revoke my earlier downvote)
- updated due to new information, and also so I can remove my downvote!
- Edited to allow me to cast my upvote
- I did intend to upvote this post too.
- Changing my vote
- no-op edit so downvote can be reversed
- no-op edit so that i can change my vote since there is an SE now...
- Urgent need to change my vote ;-)
- mostly editing to remove my downvote; see comments
- tiny edit mainly so I can re-upvote (I accidentally removed my vote after the last edit)
- Edited to change a miscast vote.
- vote change
- Edit so I can downvote it.
Is this acceptable behavior? Even if I have edit privileges on a Stack Exchange site, shouldn't my vote be locked in until someone else edits a post? If not, what's the point of locking votes in the first place if anyone with edit privileges can get around that "restriction" anyway?

Should we allow edits to reverse upvotes and downvotes?– JNK Oct 20 '11 at 19:57