First let's assume the reader is mainly interested in correct answers.
Whenever an answer seems to be clear and correct, and there are no relevant contrary facts, references, or (sound) reasons noted in the comments or answers, downvotes can be ignored.
It is possible that the downvoter:
- knows of a relevant objection, lacks the time to explain it, and dutifully downvotes an answer.
- is in error.
- is voting from some baser interest. Example: suppose a bounty with tied answers, and they wish to break the tie for themselves, an ally, or against a non-ally.
- is a keyword-based bot, or sometimes behaves like one.
There's no way to distinguish the first case from the others, even if there's a lot of downvotes.
As far as users finding answers goes, sometimes being in last place, or near last place, is itself a useful distinction. Popularity is not infallible, and some popular answers are incorrect. The suitably skeptical reader may then scroll to the end, and perhaps find a more correct minority answer.
Now let's assume the reader is more interested in advertising, social networking for its own sake, ulterior psychological motives, or adversarial competition. To them a vote is a vote, no matter the reason.
Such readers have many reasons to fight. Uncommented downvotes can:
- reduce their own public esteem.
- reduce their allies public esteem.
- reduce the eyeball count for something they wish to promote.
- reduce their take-home pay, if they're paid to flog social media.
- contradict their prime directive (bots & AIs)
- mar a "perfect record".
- worsen paranoia.
Readers in first group (interested mainly in correct answers) all probably sometimes wish there were no readers in the second group, but the second group posts useful answers and comments too, and sometimes votes well.
Readers in the second group (a vote is a vote) may be skeptical about whether there really are any readers in the first group.