4 of 6
Rollback to Revision 2 - rolled back because 1) the edit makes the comments nonsensical; 2) the edit makes the "example" redundant; it's no longer an example, just rewording of the subsequent sentence;
Mark Amery
  • 147.9k
  • 15
  • 121
  • 183

I like the idea of doing some sort of experiment like this; I actually suggested it right before the start of the welcoming civil war.

A few extra thoughts, none of which should be taken to mean that it'd be a bad idea to run this experiment exactly as you've designed:

  1. You've suggested that there might be discrimination in how a poster is received based upon their rep, and proposed a methodology to try to confirm this. But there are clearly other things that might prejudice a reader; for example I can see that you are probably an Indian (since your username is gparyani and Paryani is an Indian surname). Readers could plausibly discriminate on the basis of sex, race, nationality, and style of username or profile picture. It'd be nice to test these factors too.

  2. Your approach sort-of-hides the asker's rep, but not very well; if I'm in the group that can't see rep, I'll presumably still be able to click through to the answer's profile.

  3. Readers in the group that have a whole load of information suddenly stripped from them probably won't be too happy about this.

  4. Your approach requires work from the staff, which isn't ideal.

  5. You propose splitting readers into two groups with different access to information. There's another way to perform a trial like this, which is for high-rep askers to randomly be assigned an account to ask their question under. The flow would look something like this:

  • A few dozen >10k users, like me, agree that we want to participate in an experiment to find out if question reception is biased by rep/name/gender/race/nationality
  • One of us hacks together an off-site webpage and logins for all of us.
  • Whenever any of us wants to ask a question (or maybe post an answer, too?), first we write it up in full, then we go to that web page and paste the question text into a form. That form records the question (pre-registration!) and randomly chooses whether we should ask the question under our own account or under the account of a new <100 rep user. In the latter case, it randomly selects a gender and race and nationality for us, and then randomly selects either a gender-and-race-and-nationality-appropriate name or a tells us to go by userNNNNNNN for some random NNNNNNN, and then either selects a random gender-and-race-and-nationality-appropriate profile picture for us or tells us to use a gravatar image.
  • If necessary, we create a new account with the details we were randomly assigned. (This might not be necessary if the form told us to use our own account, or if we already have a fake account with the right demographics.)
  • We ask our question and paste a link to it into the form to confirm that we asked it.
  • Over time, we gather a bunch of data about the reception of these questions, which were written in advance by established users but then randomly assigned to users with a variety of demographics. Eventually, we will have enough data to confidently detect bias, if it exists.
  • At the end of the process, we each send the staff a giant account merge request asking to merge all our fake accounts back into our real one.

This approach would have the advantage of not requiring any development work on the company's side; the community could independently carry out this randomised trial of the effect of a user's profile on their question's reception and all the staff would have to do is merge some accounts at the end.

Mark Amery
  • 147.9k
  • 15
  • 121
  • 183