The list of hot questions is shown on stackexchange.com and the MultiCollider (the dropdown in the top left). The idea behind it is, as far as I understand it, to present interesting questions across the whole network. I often find interesting posts that I wouldn't have seen otherwise when browsing the hot questions list, but I think that there is a lot of potential to improve the selection.

There are several aspect that could be improved in my opinion:

Questions can stay in the list for too long, making the list a bit too static for regular SE users. I've previously posted a feature request about this, and I still think that no question should be able to stay in the hot questions list for a whole week.

The current criteria are prone to select problematic questions. They value a high number of answers, which you find for example in list questions. So questions like this example from Math.SE have it easy to get into the list, while this type of question is regarded as problematic by most of the SE network and expicitly disallowed on many sites.

Being in the list of hot questions is self-perpetuating. Questions on the list get significantly more exposure, which means more votes, which then improves the position in the list of hot questions. The votes from outside users are also problematic as they represent mostly the popular appeal of the posts, not necessarily a judgement of the quality by an expert.

I've some ideas on what could be changed:

Exclude community wiki questions from the list. Those are usually big list-style questions that aren't a good example for high-quality content across the network.

Put less value on a high number of answers. The current method values (as far as I understand it) a high number of answers and a high total score of all answers. This preferentially puts more subjective or list-type questions to the top. A good question that got one high-quality answer that is highly upvoted shouldn't be at a disadvantage compared to a popular question that gets lots of opinions. Maybe counting only the first two or three answers and their combined score would be enough.

Weight external votes differently from internal votes. External votes from users that discover the question via the hot questions list shouldn't be counted in full, they mostly represent the additional exposure and the mass-appeal of the question, not necessarily the quality. But they also shouldn't be disregarded completely, a question that doesn't get any votes from the external users is probably too specialized to be of interest to a wide audience.

Normalize votes for each site. The voting behaviour varies a lot between different sites. Currently sites that have an above average number of votes are favoured compared to other sites. Normalizing the votes on a per-site base would put a stronger emphasis on the number of votes a specific questions gets compared to other questions on the same sites. It would prevent certain sites from being overrepresented due to their general voting behaviour.

These are just some rough ideas, I'm open to more suggestions.

share|improve this question
I reckon with external votes you mean votes by users with less than 150 rep? Because this would (rightly so) exclude people like me who have 101-rep accounts on almost every site, just so I can upvote content I like. Or would this be based on whether you have asked or answered any questions on the site? This might be more fair to 'new' users – Ivo Flipse Jul 9 '12 at 11:54
I mean 101 reputation accounts that haven't posted anything on that site. But you could also just use the referer for this specific purpose, so it would count anyone who has seen the post due to the hot questions list, not users that saw it on the actual site. – Mad Scientist Jul 9 '12 at 12:19
Related: Exclude Community Wiki questions from the 'hot questions' list. Like that question, these suggestions all ignore the larger problem, which is why are these sites allowing junk, decidedly un-SE content to thrive? Fix that problem and this largely becomes a non-issue. – user149432 Aug 5 '12 at 17:41
I think a metric for bikeshed-iness would be helpful in determining what should and shouldn't go in the multicollider. – Andrew Grimm Jan 19 at 8:06

1 Answer

I propose a system similar to that implemented by Reddit. From Wikipedia (my emphasis)

Front page rank, for both the general front page and for individual reddits, is determined by the age of the submission, positive ("upvoted") to negative ("downvoted") feedback ratio and the total vote count. Dozens of submissions cycle through these front pages daily.

Such that there is some function of a question's age, number of votes, ratio of votes, and (unique to Stack Exchange) number of upvoted answers. The results of this function would rank questions across the network by "hotness" and they would be displayed accordingly. I think the most critical part of the function is the age. A question that is older should require more votes to keep it on the hot list.

share|improve this answer

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged