It appears to me that answers listed higher in the list of answers get upvoted disproportionately more than the quality of the answer would necessarily justify.
My gut feeling is that this happens simply because answers get read top to bottom and not everyone reads all the way to the bottom.
The result of this would be that every vote could be theoretically broken down into two components - a portion that actually rates the value of the answer and a portion that reflects its position in the list
This latter portion that reflects its position in the list seems to me to be (a) significant in amount and (b) completely irrelevant to helping the answers reach an ordering, final score that accurately reflects their value to readers
In other words, answering a question early seems to heavily bias the score of the answer away from it's otherwise natural score which would be based entirely on quality. I can understand the benefit of thereby encouraging fast answers but this also detracts from the quality of those earliest answers.
What could/should be done about this?
I have since thought of a possible solution, which would be to use a mathematical model to estimate the portion of the vote that has been awarded solely by virtue of its position in the list, and only attribute the portion of the vote that remains. That way the answers could still be listed in order of highest vote first, but voting on an answer higher in the list would count less than voting on an answer lower in the list. Not quite sure how this could be simply implemented yet though. Seems in might require counting some votes and not others, or scaling the voting all up e.g. by a factor of 100.