Motivation
It is a frequent occurrence on SO that OPs do not engage with the responses they get. They do not vote, do not accept and do not comment on any of the sometimes multiple answers they receive. This is frustrating to respondents, because, after having invested time and effort into writing up an answer to help them, the OP is not even willing to spend what little time it takes to engage with the answer and give them feedback whether the answer was helpful. Some of the people behaving this way just ask one question and never return. But others are repeat offenders at this.
This frustration has led to many asking for mods or the community to be able to vote to set an answer as accepted (e.g. here) or to punish the users (e.g. here). There are good reasons why these have not been implemented. Yet, it remains a problem that lack of engagement is a drag on the motivation of people providing answers on SO.
Proposal
I think questions should show statistics about OP's past engagement with answers they received for their questions. What share of the answers they receive do they vote on? For how many of their questions that received an answer did they accept one? With how many of the answers they received did they engage at all?
If we had statistics like that, clearly visible next to the question, people who care about getting engagement from OPs can just avoid answering questions by the repeat offenders of non-engagement. It might also encourage the repeat offenders to change their behavior in order to increase their likelihood of getting an answer. Given the extent to which acceptance behavior correlates to reputation and by extension experience, it makes sense to educate less experienced users on this matter.
Possible Downsides
- This might lead to people accepting answers that did not solve the problem. This is a valid concern that could be addressed by only showing this number when it is particularly low.
- It might lead to OPs upvoting undeserving answers. I think this is not much of a problem, as any answer that shows a serious effort by the respondent deserves an upvote from the OP even if it did not fully solve the problem. Downvotes cost reputation and not everyone can downvote, but the cost is low, as is the reputation threshold. Also, low-quality answers where no good faith effort was made are not that common.
- To some who do not care about this information, this might be clutter. The three statistics I suggested are just a proposal, I would already find just one of them fairly helpful. If clutter is an issue, then maybe just go with one or two.
Alternatives
I have cited some unsuccessful past proposals for dealing with non-engagement with answers. Another way to encourage engagement would be notifications or other prompts to call users attention to these questions and animate them to engage. I have no idea to what extent this might already be happening, as I rarely ask questions and do engage with answers that I receive. But if it does not exist, that would also be a measure I would like to see.
tl;dr
Show stats on OP's answer engagement history next to their questions.