- Many/most of the very high-ranked users are posting many, many answers, but are asking almost no questions.
- Obviously some users are like "answering-machines" waiting for new questions to answer freshly asked questions.
I'd say that these conclusions are broadly accurate.
For more thoughts on observation #1, see:
As far as observation #2, this is pretty much the central mechanism that makes Stack Overflow work. We get a lot of questions. If we didn't have "answering-machines" dedicated to monitoring these new questions and posting high-quality answers, the site would basically stop working.
In fact, it has been pointed out as a concern that the rate at which high-reputation users are answering questions has declined over the years.
- What is the motivation for these contributors? Is it altruism or are they hunting for reputation? I'd assume the latter.
I'm not sure why you'd assume the latter. Most of the top answerers already have tons of rep, way more than they know what to do with. Once you get past 10k, you have virtually all the moderation privileges you need, and the additional reputation won't even buy you a cup of coffee.
That's not to say that there aren't people out there who are doing it for the reputation. But in my experience, if you're just in it for the rep, the novelty wears off rather quickly. I'd even go so far as to say if reputation is your sole motivation, you're doing it wrong. It's certainly not why I'm here.
The top answerers are all here for different reasons, and to know for sure, you'd have to ask them, but here's my list:
- the satisfaction of helping people
- the desire to improve my knowledge and learn new things
- the ability to subject my existing knowledge/skills to expert review
- the fact that Stack Overflow does Q&A right, with high quality standards, minimal chit-chat, absence of social-networking features, and so on.
Is it altruism? Well, that's complicated. Altruism is complicated. Parts of the motivation certainly are altruistic. But what if you derive satisfaction from helping people? Then are you behaving altruistically? Not really—you're actually pursuing selfish motives. But this complexity of motivations is why the community works! Humans aren't quite altruistic enough to do all of this for no personal benefit or satisfaction, but many of us are altruistic enough to see the value in helping others.
- Doesn't this behaviour result in lower quality or at least limits the level of quality of answers? (mid to long-term)
I'm not following the logic here. I guess this is an allusion to the fastest gun in the west problem, where the "gamification" of Q&A seems to encourage users to hastily answer a question just to gain reputation? That's been discussed at length, so I don't really want to rehash it.
It is decidedly not what motivates me. I'm equally likely to answer an old question as I am a brand new one, and in either case, I'm not interested in getting my answer posted quickly—I'm interested in writing the best, most thorough, and most accurate answer that I can. (Earlier today, I spent a fair bit of time answering this question, which had already received an upvoted and accepted answer—and one I wasn't even necessarily disagreeing with.)
I recognize that I might be unusual in this, but then I'd turn the question around: do you have any actual evidence for the supposition that posting rapid answers will decrease the quality of answers over time? It's not like Stack Overflow is a brand new website. It's been around for a long time, long enough that you could go back and compare the quality of answers from 2009–11 to answers from 2015–17. Anecdotally, going by what I've seen, there is no such decline in quality. If anything, the quality has increased because we have more participants to post answers, review answers, make edits, leave comments, etc. etc.
Even the FGITW problem isn't quite what you're concerned about here. With FGITW, people post short, arguably insufficient answers just to be first, and then flesh them out into real answers later. That's not a long-term quality problem, just a short-term one.
- Wouldn't an increased participation of these users in asking increase the overall quality and knowledge base of Stack Overflow? I'd assume they are encountering and dealing with more subtle problems according to their skill-level and finding better solutions for that.
Maybe. I don't know. High-reputation users do tend to ask questions, just not very many of them. Generally, this isn't because they already know everything, but rather because they know how to determine the answers. Much of the time, when I set out to determine the answer to a problem, I find that it has already been answered—often on Stack Overflow. So no, I don't think the quality of our questions is necessarily suffering because high-reputation users aren't asking more of them.
But if you have ideas for encouraging people to ask better, more interesting questions, then feel free to share them. I certainly don't think we should do anything to discourage experts from asking questions. In fact, I'm a big critic of things I perceive as attempts to turn this into a "debug-my-code" site, because good programmers don't need other people to debug their code. They'll have more complex, nuanced, and interesting problems that don't just simply revolve around a code dump—and we need these questions too, to keep other experts engaged and participating.
I'll also just point out that asking a good question is extremely difficult—more difficult than posting a good answer. High-reputation users know what quality is, and they apply those same quality standards to themselves when composing questions. It takes longer to write a good question than it does to write a good answer. Pretty easy to imagine which one they think is a better use of their limited time.
I'd assume they are encountering and dealing with more subtle problems according to their skill-level and finding better solutions for that.
one reason why there's often not much incentive to do so it that explaining a complex/subtle problem is a lot of work, and often enough it is more time-efficient to research the problem yourself than sit down and compose a good question from itIs it altruism or are they hunting for reputation? I'd assume the latter.
um... why, exactly? When you have, say, 50,000 reputation points, what is the point in accumulating 50,000 more?