Timeline for Do you observe increased relevance of Related Questions with our Machine Learning experiment?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
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Mar 30, 2023 at 18:53 | comment | added | Bella_Blue StaffMod | You are correct, CTR won’t be enough. But it is only the first data point we are tracking in these experiments. In future iterations, we plan to also analyze the activity and user behaviors once users land on the related question pages. Things we will be tracking are subsequent actions taken on the page; including voting and commenting (attempts and successes), and time spent on page before closing. We believe building out from CTR and including these metrics will give us better signals as to whether something might be relevant or not. | |
Mar 30, 2023 at 7:49 | comment | added | VLAZ |
One very common problem which revolves around "people don't always know what they're looking for." is that users ask questions which should have been de-composed more. "Why does X not work in ABC" where A, B, and C are three circumstances. But A and C probably have no relevance. This might be something like "summing digits inside an if " where the if is a red herring. Then from that lack of decomposition, some directly ask about X in Y where the Y is irrelevant. Example being "summing digits inside React" where the problem isn't with React but with the summing.
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Mar 30, 2023 at 3:13 | comment | added | philipxy | Moreover almost all posters are terrible at phrasing their questions & their titles when they do "know what they are looking for"--whether they have only an inkling or have a clear idea. They will not compose a clear concise generic phrasing by which they could title, ask or even have searched. Or by which they could debug or reason. | |
Mar 29, 2023 at 23:02 | history | answered | Makoto | CC BY-SA 4.0 |