It's been mentioned to perhaps hide your own question scores (or at least negative ones) until you have a certain amount of rep. I see pros and cons.
If what we're looking for is making new people feel welcome, why not (rather than simply hiding information), replace the negative score with community provided feedback (which is incentivized by SO to be very welcoming, friendly, and helpful) on how to improve the question.
This would place a burden on those casting downvotes to be helpful to the unseasoned newcomers. I know this isn't something that would be eagerly welcomed by those of us who do cast downvotes with the primary motive of quality, and are worried about the volume of low quality questions. And I don't know that this would be practical. So I'm not suggesting it as a finished solution - just putting it out there to spark thought and discussion on outside-the-box ways on how to welcome new folks.
edit: A few more thoughts. In a real-life situation, what would you tell someone who'd asked a group a question? You probably wouldn't silently shake your head and then switch your attention to other things. You'd probably have most people remain silent while one or a few politely offered suggestions or asked further questions to clarify. But here we sort of expect the question to not be a dialog, but a finished product given by the OP.
What if instead of Up/Down "votes" we had upvotes (which indicates you found the question or answer valuable/helpful) and suggestions for improvement or clarifications. Above a certain rep, sure, show the downvotes. Below a certain rep, "downvoters" are requiredable to offer a suggestion for improving or clarifying the question, or to ask follow-up questions. Once I love the idea of "21 users thought this needs improvement. 5 of them offered these suggestions". Perhaps even better would be "Several users thought... 5 of them offered...".
Once the question is edited to a high enough quality it can have all "downvotes" removed and be bumped. I'd even say that low-rep low quality (net up/down score) questions have the number of downvotes hidden from all users (perhaps unless you're above a certain rep).