I am doing a statistical analysis and I need a lower bound. I need to exclude from this particular analysis a certain segment of the user population because the analysis is about contributing users and the criterion is reputation. There is a fine line that separates the contributing community from the rest. That line corresponds to a certain reputation. That's the number I am looking for.
I know about the exceptions. I know about the 30k rep users with one post that is years old. I know about extremely active users with low rep because they offer bounties. Such exceptions are considered negligible. Consider the following facts about Stack Overflow users:
- There are 8,884,970 users and the average reputation is 111.
- 93.8% of users don't even have enough reputation to downvote.
If we're interested in a statistical analysis of the contributing community we need to find that separation line, especially when we're talking about a line that separates the minority from the majority.
I am looking for that magical number that represents "decent reputation" in order to use it as a cut-off point to separate the statistical noise from the relevant data.
To clarify what I mean by "lower bound" or "cut-off point", consider this extremely awesome answer. In that analysis, Kevin Montrose chose 1000 rep as the lower bound, saying:
I've chosen 1000 rep as a good "earned your stripes" cutoff, below this point you get really freaky outliers
Kevin Montrose had a very good reason for not choosing the average rep. as the lower bound. He arrived at the 1000 rep. point by trial and error.
I am interested in both subjective answers (e.g. "I think 1000 rep. is a decent reputation") and objective answers that try to find that separation line by other methods.
There must be a way to find the border between contributing and not so contributing users.
This "lower bound", "decent rep.", "lowest rep of active users" or whatever you like to call it, can be used by anyone in future statistics.