Note: Based on Shog's answer to this question, reviews actually are prioritized based on number of past reviews. I am leaving the below for posterity, and redoing the math based on the numbers he shared in the comments
Here are the current amount of posts in the queue by number of existing votes:
Reviews #
0 62777
1 14747
2 3871
3 955
4 150
5 32
6 5
I will assume:
- Items with zero reviews start at 1 close vote
- 100% of reviewers vote to close
- Therefore anything with 3+ reviews would currently have 4 close votes
- Close votes expire after 4 days, and 100% of questions have over 100 views
- We get 600 reviews a day (all votes to close)
- We will get 600 more questions in the close queue
Note: These are assumptions for the sake of running the numbers.
If we were to implement this idea, here is what the queue would look like if they implemented it currently:
Votes #
1 62777
2 14747
3 3871
4 1142
Because questions with fewer votes take more reviews to clear, we would be able to clear out the 4-vote questions in 2 days. It would take 13 days to clear the 3-answer questions. And then it would take 74 days to clear out the 2-vote questions. By the time we were down to the 1-vote questions, we would need 774 days to clear the queue (and would never catch up).
While it would feel good to be able to clear out the low-hanging fruit over the next couple of months, we would just run in to the same problem again once we got to the 1-vote questions.
I think that using smoke and mirrors to make the queue appear smaller is just a cosmetic change that doesn't solve the fundamental problem with the size of the queue right now. I would much rather priority spent actually solving the underlying issues.
Previous answer remains below
Executive Summary
I strongly disagree with this idea because:
- It doesn't solve the problem
- It doesn't reflect how the queue is actually handled
I would much rather the developers spend time on fixing a problem rather than dressing it up and creating separate issues.
It Doesn't Solve the Problem
The issue is that the queue is not decreasing in size. As Shog9 points out this is because the number of review tasks (the number of flags and close votes outside the queue) are increasing.
Let's assume this increases motivation to use more close votes. This will only affect:
- People not using all their close votes each day
- Who are looking at the queue size (actually look at the review queue)
- Who only avoid the close vote queue because of the size
In other words, it is a drop in the bucket and will likely have no real impact.
It Doesn't Reflect How the Queue is Actually Handled
If you show the amount of review tasks with 4 close votes, that doesn't mean you will get a review task with 4 close votes. As gnat has pointed out the issue is that the queue doesn't work that way, and you are as likely to get a question with 1 vote as you are to get a question with 4. Let's say that 1/4th of the questions in the queue have 4 close votes (I strongly doubt that is the case, but let's assume anyway), that means when you click a question you have:
- A 50% chance of not impacting the number at all (get a 1- or 2- close vote review)
- A 25% chance of increasing the size of the queue (get a 3-close vote review and vote to close)
- A 25% chance of decreasing the size of the queue (get a 4-close vote review and vote to close)
So this 'motivational tool' will actually result in you pushing up the number, which certainly doesn't make a whole lot of sense.
Example
There are 80k questions in the queue (give or take).
Assuming even distribution:
- 20k with 1 vote
- 20k with 2 votes
- 20k with 3 votes
- 20k with 4 votes
This proposal would show the queue size as 20k (number of 4-vote questions).
However, due to the review task you get being random, you are no guaranteed to get a question you can vote to close and eliminate from the queue.
If you get a 1-vote or 2-vote question, even if you vote to close there will be no impact on the 20k (number of 4-vote questions in the queue).
If you get a 3-vote question, and vote to close, that 3-vote question will become a 4-vote question. The 20k number will become 20k + 1 -- the size of the queue will increase as a result of participation.
If you get a 4-vote question, and vote to close, one question will be eliminated from the queue.
If we add up the probabilities in regards to impact on queue size we get:
( 50% * 0 ) + ( 25% * 1 ) + ( 25% * -1 ) = 0 + 1 - 1 = 0
In other words, there will be no net impact from reviewing on the queue if we just make the numbers fuzzy. This is not motivating.
"11,325 questions left!"
(11325= 1000*ln(82832))
Edit: Wait, actually, that's not a terrible idea.lots
?