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At what reputation you think a user can be considered a seasoned contributor?

I am doing a statistical analysis and I need a lower bound. I need to exclude from this particular analysis a certain segment of the user population based on reputation. I could come up with my own number but that would be too subjective. I think it's better to let the community decide.

On Stack Overflow there are different kinds of users. At one extreme there are help vampires.

At the other extreme there's Jon Skeet. enter image description here

Somewhere between these 2 extremes is the sweet spot I am looking for. I am looking for a user that you might say has "decent reputation". I mean a user who, based on their reputation, has contributed enough to be taken into account when we calculate the effects of a certain hypothetical feature request. In other words, we don't want users at or above a certain reputation level to be affected too much if the feature is implemented.

To clarify what I mean by "lower bound" consider this extremely awesome answer. In that analysis, Kevin Montrose chose 1000 rep as the lower bound, saying:

I've chosen 1000 rep as a good "earned your stripes" cutoff, below this point you get really freaky outliers

Instead of simply choosing that number arbitrarily, I just wanted to get that number from the community.

The problem is that there are 8884970 users and the average rep. is 111 (as of 2018.05.31). Kevin Montrose had a very good reason for not choosing the average rep. as the lower bound. It's impossible to not be subjective here. But the statistics would be more interesting if the lower bound is set by the community itself.

By the way, this lower bound can be used by anyone in future statistics. Of course, if we can't find out what the community itself considers "seasoned contributor reputation", then... it is what it is; we will pull a number out of our... imagination and go with it.

q-l-p
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