You're bringing up a subject that, as of late, has been near and dear to my heart. I've been tasked with looking at this exact problem and trying to figure out what, if anything, can be done to fix it without breaking the way we do things.
Stack Overflow is different from other sites because we allow the user who asked the question (the OP) to accept the answer that worked for them, even if that answer happens to be bad practice or even wrong.
The way I see it, there are two different types of accepted answers that fall into your "underdog" group:
- Obsolete, out of date, wrong accepted answers - let's call these "controversial answers"
- Good accepted answers where there is another higher scored answers - we'll call these "other answers"
Of these two groups which one do we or should we be targeting? Do we target both or just one?
Other Answers
I think the largest group of your "underdog category" is going to be the "Other Answers". These are answers that are scored higher than the accepted answer, but there are several things that also need to be considered when discussing them:
- Is the accepted answer wrong or contain bad information?
- Does the accepted answer not actually answer the question?
- Does this "other answer" provide a better solution than the accepted one?
- Is score enough to decide we need to move the answers?
Besides the examples in your question, this category includes interesting answers like this which is great accepted solution that directly answers the question. The question also has another answer that has a higher score, but you have to read a entire book to extract a solution. Why does this really long answer need to be moved above a short specific solution? A lot of similar answers fall into the "underdog" category and potentially would be impacted by any changes to sorting put into place.
It boils down to what signal should be used to "swap" the "other answers"?
Controversial Answers
The second category of answers is the "controversial answer". I believe this is the where the biggest concern is. These are accepted answers which could be negatively scored, contain out of date/obsolete information, contain bad advice, yet the OP accepted it because it was the solution that worked for them. At one point, these might have been good (or even great) answers that received upvotes but now they only receive downvotes.
By default, the accepted answer (unless it's self-accepted) appears at the top, so these yucky answers show up even if we don’t want them to be seen first.
One solution would be to:
But then we are losing content, which might still be useful to people running older systems, so that's bad.
These are also not necessarily the easiest to find. They potentially could be identified by looking at Total Votes vs Current Score. If the Score is significantly less than the Total Number of Votes, then it's possible these might be "controversial". But once we find them, then what?
Now What?
I'd suggest reading Shogs gallbladder answer, while the stats are from 2013, the numbers and percentages are roughly about the same today. To get some current stats, I quickly threw together a SEDE query.
+------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------+
| # Ques w/ Accepted Answer & Another Answer | 2,593,911 |
| # Ques w/ Accepted Answer Score < Another Answer | 419,853 |
| # Ques w/ Neg Accepted Answer < Another Answer | 7,908 |
| # Ques w/ Neg Accepted Answer < Another Positive Scored Answer | 5,180 |
+------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------+
There are a lot of questions that have an accepted answer that scores less than another answer, but the number impacted drops considerably when you start digging into the data based on score.
We are back to the question what is the problem we are trying to solve? Are we looking for a broader impact for any question that has an answer that is scored higher than the accepted one?
This is a good discussion to have, but as you can see it tends to lead to more questions. All I can say right now, is we're looking at it. I've got a few ideas to possibly solve it, and we're planning on discussing it in the next 6-8 somethings.