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I was simply wondering if there was anything in place to automatically detect duplicate questions?

Perhaps some users are crawling the site and are using some techniques (string matching or machine learning for instance) to detect duplicates, but is there an official (read run by stackoverflow)

Would it be interesting to have this to help moderate the site?

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  • As soon as you have solid way to detect "no research is done" condition picking first SO hit for title of the question on Google/Bing is trivial part. Nov 8, 2017 at 18:50
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    I'm not sure how feasible it is to do this without human intervention; sometimes a few words can make all the difference, and programming questions are by nature permutations of a limited corpus of terminology. But the function that suggests duplicates while you're typing a question could definitely be improved. Nov 9, 2017 at 3:18
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    I think a “likelyhood of being a dup” score would be a better way to proceed. A high score would give people pause and allow them to address it, whereas a “this is a duplicate” message would be ignored after encountering a few false positives.
    – Mike Wise
    Nov 9, 2017 at 7:20
  • Google (the search leader, right?) is amazing, but way way worse than human still. While machine learning is conquering humanity, it's still not able to do broad stuff. You probably should ask such question in 2027.
    – Sinatr
    Nov 9, 2017 at 10:38
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    You can probably never automate this process, since the procedure of spotting a duplicate almost always requires domain knowledge.
    – Lundin
    Nov 9, 2017 at 10:57
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    Related on MSE: Project reduplication of deduplication has begun
    – jscs
    Nov 9, 2017 at 12:59
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    Given how broken the Stack Overflow search engine is, it is unlikely for an automated duplicate checker based on it to make this site any more efficient. It would just get flooded with false positives and suffer from lots of false negatives. Nov 10, 2017 at 9:04
  • We have system that detects duplicate from comments past by user and we find a lot of Duplicate Posts, the problem is not finding questions to close vote, the problem is finding people who are willing to review and vote. Nov 10, 2017 at 9:26
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    Anecdotal evidence suggests that 99% of the time when a post contains the phrase "this is not a duplicate of [question X]" it's a duplicate of question X.
    – JJJ
    Nov 10, 2017 at 11:27
  • Indeed, I did try to search the list of questions to see if this was asked beforehand. Perhaps another question then. Is there a way to "merge" duplicate questions that have been both commented on? Nov 10, 2017 at 20:20

4 Answers 4

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I asked because I am currently looking for a m[a]ster's thesis

Well, good luck. No two people describe a problem the same way, and a lot of questions actually are XY problems due to a lack of experience, lack of research or both. So the phrasing of the question isn't going to find the answer the asker needs.

The kind of questions you are going to match up with canonical duplicates by text matching are "How can I replace a string" or "How to write this RegEx" kind of questions, which will be downvoted into oblivion and deleted before you can find a duplicate, unless a 100K+ user answers them before that point.

But keep us posted, I'd love to be proven wrong.

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    "downvoted into oblivion and deleted" ... you know... hopefully.
    – canon
    Nov 9, 2017 at 14:56
  • Another common type of detecting it would be to just look at errors in the text. Most MATLAB dupes are "Error using <operator> Matrix dimensions must agree". I assume similar things in other tags Nov 10, 2017 at 11:18
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There's nothing official that detects duplicates. Well, you could count the message you get when looking at the question dupe dialog...but I'd hardly count that as useful.

Certain users use techniques to keep track of dupes, such as favoriting known canonical questions and referring back to that list, or simply Googling a key phrase or two.

It'd be infinitely useful to have this, and as far as I know, Stack Overflow is acutely aware of this and hopes to have it addressed Soon™.

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Stack Overflow already tries to suggest duplicates. When you're marking a question as a duplicate, Stack Overflow (or any Stack Exchange sites) comes with a list of Similar questions frequently linked or suggested as originals

As you can see (you can attempt marking questions as a duplicate), that list is far from perfect, and even further from fully automating flagging (honestly, I've never seen the duplicate in that list unless it was already linked).

Improving this list would perhaps be step 1 of automating duplicate detection, but I doubt even a sophisticated machine learning program could properly mark duplicates whilst not consuming excessive resources.

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I would be shocked if anyone is using anything more than SO's built-in similar question detector.

As Lundin suggests in the comments, doing much better than the existing "similar questions" feature would probably require both domain knowlege and some form of natural language understanding. From what I've seen on SO, the difference between a novel question and blatant duplicate can often be as minor as the context or combination(s) in which a problem or tool is being used.

You might be able to train a traditional neural network to spot similar questions for a very specific technology (a specific SO tag, broadly speaking). That neural network would need a massive corpus of examples to train itself on, and would be useless for questions involving any other technologies. Plus, you would run into the chicken-and-egg problem of automatically deciding which specialized network is most appropriate for a given question (which means you would need some form of natural language understanding anyway).

A single neural network trained on every technology covered by SO would be so broad and generalized as to be useless. I have a hunch such a generalized network would wind up reinventing a poorly-performing fuzzy string matching algorithm anyway.

Unfortunately, an algorithm that can actually understand the text of a question seems to be considered an AI Complete problem.

Note: I am not even remotely an expert in the field of AI. Just an armchair hobbyist.

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