Is there a statistic on the percentage of first-time questions that are deemed low quality - either a duplicate, unanswerable, mostly opinion etc and subsequently closed? I think it would be interesting to know, if only out of curiosity.
1 Answer
Sure. Out of 546773 questions asked by first-time authors during the past 365 days, 146185 were closed or deleted, or 27% low-quality.
Note that questions can also be deleted by their authors, or because the system deemed them abandoned - and not all low-quality questions get closed either. Therefore, perhaps a better metric is closed or scoring < 0, which gives us 160518 questions during the same time period and 29% low-quality for first-time authors.
Here's a gratuitous graph of low-quality posts (by the second criteria) by month over the past year:
And the same but as a % of total questions asked by new users in each month:
Finally, it's worth comparing this to the stats for questions from folks who've asked at least one previous question. In the past 365 days, 2477915 questions were asked by users who had asked at least one previous question on Stack Overflow, and out of these 426250 questions were closed or currently score < 0, or 17% low-quality. Note that even though the % is lower, the total number is higher - only 27% of low-quality questions come from folks who've never asked questions here before.
One last gratuitous graph: low-quality questions from new users as a % of all low-quality questions asked, by month, for the whole of Stack Overflow's history:
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5April to May spike is likely because of exams suddenly coming at students– gnatCommented Aug 8, 2014 at 22:10
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I would guess projects rather than exams, but you are likely right... Commented Aug 8, 2014 at 22:13
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Do you have the sane graphs using SEs low quality algorithm rather than community feedback? What's the correlation?– BenCommented Aug 8, 2014 at 23:30
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Wow, very detailed! @gnat I'd agree, and same with the spike around Christmas time with mocks exams. It'd probably hold true if the number of new users at those times were factored in too as I'd imagine those times bring in a new influx of people. Commented Aug 9, 2014 at 0:11
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1That's... Actually not very interesting, @Ben. Hopefully will get better soon: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/267778/…– Shog9Commented Aug 9, 2014 at 0:15
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hover over the last graph for commentary: Yes, Aug. '08 was the worst month for new users percentage-wise, but they only asked 411 low-quality questions compared to 15981 last month... Commented Aug 9, 2014 at 0:19
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TIL the magic LQ heuristics are of the kind that can be computed from public data only :-) Commented Aug 9, 2014 at 3:12