Indeed, and I actually do like the fact that the bridge officers like Detmer, Owo, Bryce and Rhys are actually just recurring co-stars instead of main cast. Other Trek shows have a habit of sticking someone in the main cast just because they're a bridge officer and then doing nothing with them. Harry Kim and Travis Mayweather are the obvious go-to examples of this. Which is why I always scratch my head over the people who say things like "we should know more about Detmer [or whoever]. If this were one of the other shows, we would have." Well, no, we wouldn't. We'd know exactly as much as we currently do. Just in the other shows, those characters would be listed in the main cast and would do promotional images with everyone else creating the impression we know them better than we in fact do.
I maintain that part of the reason why people wanted to get to know Owo, Detmer, and the rest after Season 1 was the difference between how the scripts treated them versus how the directors (and costuming treated them).
In earlier Treks, there were always extras. Sometimes they were seen on the bridge (this seemed particularly common during TNG) and they occasionally got a line or two. But they were meant to blend into the background. They were human characters with the blandest, most non-descript hair and makeup imaginable. The camera never lingered on them for more than a few seconds.
Discovery didn't do this with some of its extras. Airiam had really elaborate cybernetic prosthetics which kept everyone curious. Detmer had the scars, eyepiece, and partially shaved head. Owo just had great hair. All of this helped set them out in scenes. I think it's no surprise people wanted more of them, and didn't much care about Bryce or Rhys, who were much more "generic" in terms of their presentation.
The camera would also linger on them from time to time. Like Michael or Lorca would say something, and then they'd cut to Owo or Detmer's face and get a reaction shot. This means the direction was treating them as characters whose emotional responses mattered, rather than mere bridge furniture.