Yes, I know...I'm kinda revisiting an old request to encourage answer acceptance, but in contrast to that question, I'd like to offer that an upvote is more obvious than accept, and in the case of a new user (marked as such with the "Be Nice" banner) who genuinely doesn't know the difference between an upvote and an accept, it might be worthwhile to prompt with a dialog "Would you like to accept this answer?"...and include a brief contrast between accept and upvote...and a violin about the angst caused to those poor downtrodden writers-of-self-perceived-good-answers.
I get that automated or enqueued behaviors as described in this other feature request aren't in keeping with the users' prerogatives to genuinely appreciate an answer, but it seems like letting them know the difference is worthwhile. I'm principally talking about the users who haven't even gained the copper shiny coin for reading about asking questions.
Do I really care about the extra 5 points? No! Well yes...I mean...it's a good idea to bring closure, eh? If this seems too...um...beggary, maybe a positive response from said dialog might net only the meager upvote score. I think I'm more interested in getting the question rounded out...but maybe I'm only fooling myself.
Anyway, I suspect there are boatloads of single-answer questions where a new user upvoted (and maybe even gave a shout-out), but didn't actually accept...principally based on their unfamiliarity with the domain. Seems like a gentle prompt might both inform said new user and relieve the harried serial new-questioner answer-writer.
By all means, I accept the principle that the site is mostly for the folks searching for an answer to an immediate need, but I'd propose that such seekers get more from the site when there are more happy question-answerers.