Short answer: no. For the most part, questions are self-contained. If it's a good, well-researched question, then you'll get good, well-researched answers.
Slighty longer answer: I will say that I've noticed that higher-rep users tend to ask better questions. (Put another way: lower-rep users tend to ask worse questions.) And this makes sense, since high-rep users have been around longer and know what makes a good question, and if you ask good questions you'll gain reputation. I wouldn't say that makes me less likely to answer a low-rep user, but it does make me more likely to answer a high-rep user. I should note that it doesn't really matter whether that high rep came from asking or answering.
Long answer: In addition to asking good, well-researched questions, the other thing you can do to help your "appearance" is by upvoting and accepting answers to your old questions. If I see the same user asking 3 questions a day in the same tag and never upvoting or accepting any answers, I'm less likely to answer questions from that user. Similarly, if it looks like a user is using Stack Overflow as google (posting a question for every little problem they have without showing much research), then that user is less likely to get an answer.
Looking at your question history, it looks like you do a good job of upvoting and accepting answers. But it looks like none of your questions have ever been upvoted, and that's probably because you aren't including an MCVE. Including an MCVE (instead of the disconnected snippets you're providing now) is the best thing you can do to help yourself get answers (and upvotes). That matters much more than your reputation or whether you answer any questions yourself.