I regularly encounter questions (often determined to be low quality) in which the asker posts the question only because they lack the requisite terminology (keyword) knowledge of the context domain that would otherwise enable them to effectively research on their own and find the answer. (One could argue that this is essentially the case for every question for which there is relevant information that's both indexed and accessible from some search engine — perhaps even every question that's been asked on the site: it is the nature of asking.)
In the case I describe, it's not that the asker isn't incredibly intelligent or lacks motivation, etc. — rather, the nature of the knowledge sought is that (statistically) it is only obtained through exposure/experience that the asker lacks.
Often I see these questions downvoted and/or closed without any helpful knowledge path forward for the asker (reasons like: needs more focus/clarity/etc.). If it were in the asker's power to provide that information, then surely they would in an effort of obtaining useful information toward their objective. (I recognize that motivation is impossible to determine on our part and that there are genuinely plenty of low-quality questions due to laziness, etc.)
This question isn't about downvoting:
and it's also not about triaging/closing:
If the one wanting to help prefers to engage at a lower level of empathy and/or effort, that's out of scope here. (No judgement from me.)
Rather, this question I am asking is about understanding how I/we can be more empathetic/helpful in cases when an answer perhaps isn't possible, but generalized (yet context-relevant) information can be imparted to the asker (e.g. sharing a link to a wiki page related to some detail in the context of the information in the question).
I suppose my question could be worded this way: When (from our perspective) an asker isn't capable of adequately communicating in order to obtain the knowledge they seek (the asker's perspective: query-based research fails to yield the target information), how can we empathetically help expedite their journey on a platform that's so centered around this mechanism?
Apologies if this seems too open-ended/subjective: I genuinely just want to be a better participant in knowledge-sharing.