The "interest tags" feature does a lot of the filtering. You still see questions not on that list but the ones that have tags that are on that list will get highlighted. This allows you to mentally filter out a lot of "noise" (from your perspective).
As for the level or complexity of the question, speaking for myself I read a lot more questions than I answer. Some I'll figure out "aren't for me" by reading the first sentence. That doesn't mean theres anything wrong with the question but I guess it comes down to what you're willing to answer. For me that's:
- questions that don't have an answer to which I have one;
- questions that do have an answer but I consider the current answers to be wrong and/or incomplete;
- questions that I want to know the answer to (and will then research); and
- questions that I simply find interesting for whatever reason (not necessarily predictable).
It's clear to me that many people (myself include) will, at times, trawl for questions to answer so I guess by that observation and the fact that luminaries such as Jon Skeet (primarily C#), Alex Miller (Java) and that Javascript guy (sorry, forget his name) do bother to answer questions (sometimes a lot of them) you would have to agree that SO does attract "experts".
As for the "how", well that comes down to basic human nature I believe: you'll typically find there are people who, once they become proficient at something, want to share that knowledge. Their reasons may vary from the altruistic to the egotistical but there it is. That is allowed to happen because:
- There is a sufficient volume of questions to answer (and this one is a bit of a chicken-and-egg problem); and
- The interface is sufficiently good to weed through the noise and find questions to answer.