People tend to take downvotes personally[citation needed]. It seems that new users are more likely than established users to feel negative about a downvote, and since new users are less familiar with site norms, it seems that posts by new users, especially questions, are more likely to attract downvotes than posts by established users. This seems to be especially true for the first question a new user ever asks.
But it seems to me that downvotes are rarely, if ever, intended to be personal. Other than malicious/pathological downvoting behavior (which does exist, but certainly is a small fraction of all downvotes), it seems clear that the vast majority of downvotes are directed at content and not at people.
Well-meaning users downvote content that is below the standard that we would like to preserve on this site. That's a good thing: it enables ranking and helps the quality questions and answers "rise to the top". However, users who receive downvotes rarely perceive this as a good thing, and this seems to be a key driver of the perception of Stack Overflow being unwelcoming.
With that in mind, could there be some kind of "just in time" feedback displayed to a new user the first time they receive a downvote? (Possible variations could be: first downvote on a question only, first N times a downvote is received, first N posts that are downvoted, first time a post goes below zero in total score, etc.)
As a strawman, I'm imagining a little box that says something like:
A user has voted this post down. This is feedback on the post, not on you, so please don't take it personally! Stack Overflow uses voting (both up and down) to help us identify which questions and answers are likely to be useful to future visitors and should be archived, as opposed to questions and answers that don't need to be preserved or wouldn't help anyone else in the future. We're sure, like everyone else here, you've benefited from posts that others have written in the past, and so our reputation system is designed to help everyone to "pay it forward" by incentivizing new questions and answers to benefit as many people as possible.