This recent answer posits that due to a hypothetical decline in "interesting" questions, a large number of high-reputation users have been decreasing their activity on the site, especially in the number of questions they answer. I found that hypothesis and analysis interesting enough to be addressed outside the context of its question (which was focused primarily on other issues).
My questions are:
- Is it true that most high-reputation users have been decreasing their answering activity recently?
- If so, why is it occurring? (Input from high-reputation users whose activity has slowed would be very useful)
Other considerations are:
- Is it a problem? (Perhaps it is simply a case of SO becoming more "democratic", with lower reputation users and "newer blood" filling the gap).
- If so, how can it be slowed or stopped?
To be clear, I do not necessarily agree with the original post that this decrease in high-rep user activity comes from a decline in question quality, nor that such a decline in quality necessarily exists. I could imagine several alternative hypotheses, as have others:
- Most users increase their activity over time before hitting a peak and decreasing (as suggested by Gaël Laurans here)
- An increase in low-rep answerers has decreased the need for high-rep answerers (as suggested by podiluska here)
- That some users may be motivated by reaching the top level of privilege (20K rep), and are less motivated to answer after reaching it
- That high-reputation users have become not less active, but rather more selective, editing or voting to close low-quality questions rather than answering them (an analysis of their commenting, editing and reviewing behavior might help confirm this)
- That high-reputation users earn a steady "income" from old posts, and it is therefore no longer necessary to answer to gain rep (as suggested by Martijn Pieters here)
group by
before you get burned out.