I think that currently there is no real incentive for people to correct mistakes in their questions/answers, as downvotes tend to persist (as do upvotes).
In my original question I gave an example where I got downvoted and as a result fixed my answer, but the downvote remained. Of course this could be due to a variety of reasons: the voter haven't looked at the revised answer, my correction could be wrong, etc.
The thing is, that no matter the reason for the downvote, there is no clear feedback of the fix. Without that feedback I cannot tell if I did well or not. For future viewers of the question they might skip a potentially correct answer just because it still has a low score, and my effort would be in vain.
My suggestion is to grey out scores of questions/answers that received an update, so it will be clearer that the score doesn't necessarily reflect the current content of the post. The score can become black again once all voters of the previous revision have reviewed the question (while keeping the review voluntary, maybe encourage it with e.g. a badge for revisiting X edits).
The benefit I see in this is double:
- Viewers will be less likely to rule out edited posts (after all, if someone cares to fix their mistakes we have good reason to believe they act to good purpose)
- I get acknowledged of my correction and it doesn't go unseen, thus I may be more inclined to correct future mistakes.
I believe this will encourage more people to edit their posts, because everyone makes mistakes every now and then. On a side note I think that we shouldn't be harsh on people that don't present themselves clearly on the first time, because we can't always tell the effort that was put on their side, and letting people the chance to correct themselves is an opportunity to also share their knowledge.