Has StackOverflow done any user interaction design studies targetting new users?
I've noticed that, quite frequently, new users don't appear to notice that they can accept answers by clicking the checkmark.
Here is the latest example: html footer don't seemed to stick at the bottom in Print Preview
Note the user is getting comments on the fact that he has asked 10 question but accepted none. Then he replies that he was not aware of this feature.
I, myself, was not aware of the feature until someone pointed it out to me in a comment on the first question I asked.
Everyone who sticks with the forum SO eventually (& fairly quickly) gets this, but I suspect most do not realize it at first, and that a non-trivial number of users pose legitimate questions that get answered legitimately but never get accepted because the user does not stay engaged with SO for more than the first few questions asked.
UPDATE (in response to comments, and for clarification)
The issue may not be the position of the checkmark per se.
If there is an issue (and my primary suggestion would be to conduct a usability study focussed on new users to see if there is) it may be that there needs to be more communication about the process to new users, e.g., a prominent note provided the first time a question is asked, or an important process overview page provided at account set-up. There currently is no official process overview presented anywhere, officially, on StackExchange web sites (as far as I have been able to find, and I just did a new account setup with my wordpress account just to see what's presented during that sequence.)
As one commenter pointed out, SO is not a "forum". However, I would conjecture that it is prior experiences with forums that most users hold as a frame of reference when first approaching SO, and this feature, though it is out there (e.g. Yahoo Answers), is not particularly common on forum web sites.
Perhaps Yahoo Answers is a good model to look at. I would suggest they do a better job at making this feature obvious to new users by being more explicit with the "Best Answer - Chosen by Asker" label placed promenently on such answers. I should note that I am aware of this feature on Yahoo Answers even though I have never asked or answered a question there -- it's because I've come across these pages in my Google searches and the text makes it so obvious. SO/StackExchange sites could consider, as one possible option, being similarly more explicit.
I do not believe that accepting answers is a common interaction model across the world-wide web. StackExchange sites ought to put more into educating new/potential users about such features. The green checkbox is a bit subtle for someone who might otherwise be completely unaware that answers are "accepted".
But consider all this just yakety-yack until a usability study is done.
<blink>tag? – Cody Gray May 3 '12 at 3:31