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Sometimes there are questions in the Triage queue that completely split the community (for example this). This is understandable as reviewing is sometimes a subjective thing, however when a question gets 2 reviews for each of Unsalvageable, Should Be Improved, and Looks OK, there is clearly no consensus.

In this case, is there any benefit of taking the question to a 7th review? It would be almost pot luck as to the outcome and, when the full grand plan is implemented for the Triage queue, there could be consequences for the post that are unintended.

Any thoughts on this?


Perhaps this is a better example. As you can see the "consensus" is that the post Looks OK, but a further review (I'm assuming moments later) found the post Should Be Improved. The irony is that the post itself was closed and later deleted!


Thanks to Turnerj who provided an even better example.

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  • The review item I posted has since become unreviewable after I took it as an example. I suspect this is because of the time passed rather than the number of reviews taken. Usually it would go to a 7th review.
    – worldofjr
    Dec 19, 2014 at 16:36
  • 1
    Perhaps this is a better example.
    – worldofjr
    Dec 19, 2014 at 16:37
  • 2
    I'd actually suggest 5 is a better maximum. If 5 reviews are mixed, then it's not clearly any one value. But on the other hand, they may take this into account when programming the machine learning side of things; you can have 'mixed but chose X', 'mixed but chose Y'. Yes, it might be somewhat random/arbitrary, but over a large sample you probably will get a reasonable outcome.
    – Joe
    Dec 19, 2014 at 19:38
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    Another example. Has 7 reviews with 3 "Looks OK".
    – Turnerj
    Feb 10, 2015 at 3:46

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