>  - Votes, per reputation and account age
 - Votes, per referrer
 - Votes, per amount of score in the relevants tag: c++, optimization, cpu-architecture

Should any of these points be relevant for upvotes/downvotes instead of the actual questions content?

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> How many of those 163 upvotes come from users that don't regularly visit SO?

Well, let's vivisect that:

> - Votes, per reputation and account age

Someone trusted was upvoted (devil shits on biggest heap, or the post was really helpful for many viewers).

> - Votes, per referrer

Drive by votes are likely gotten from referrers, low rep users with less insight how voting should work are likely to upvote crap also.
 
> - Votes, per amount of score in the relevants tag: c++, optimization, cpu-architecture

You mean score of the voter? Same as the 2nd point IMHO.

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Sorry to answer with counter questions, but I think that's another important point to consider.

Finally votes are anonymous, **and there are no (public) SEDE queries available** to track these backwards by properties available from the voters profile.

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> It can shed some lights about which tiers of users push towards one or another direction.

Well, I was often contemplating about the _butterfly effect_ my vote will have on a post. The most time I'm concluding like

 - If there's a reason to close, I almost always also DV the post
 - If it's worth it, I'll garnish that with a comment
 - Rarely I close vote without a downvote along, because the post formally matches all the policies we gave in the [help center](http://stackoverflow.com/help), but is too broad or another custom reason might apply 

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Well, getting upon that specific one you mentioned:

[**Deoptimizing a C++ program**](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/37361145/deoptimizing-a-c-program)

It's only helpful for someone who was asked solving that silly task given from specific course material (and the question was seen several times).

That's not a ***real world*** programming problem, and that the question was closed is the correct reaction.

Probably also the professor asking for such stuff should be kicked ass, because _"to put the cart before the horse"_ is probably the wrong teaching strategy.

It might be a reasonable exercise to explore how you can get wrong with assumptions about CPU instruction caching, but as asked it's not really useful.

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Well, I at least agree, that it would be interesting why there are so much upvotes and get some statistics about these. But as mentioned it's actually not possible, unless a mod (or even SE dev) would let have us insight about that.