I think the rate at which an asker asks questions is critical in determining whether they are abusing the Q&A format. This is already widely recognized and enforced by user and IP based question limits. But perhaps what is not recognized is that a very low rate is a good sign that the user is not a help vampire.
We experience the problem every single day of users just asking the first question that pops into their head and who have a seemingly endless supply of such questions. These are the users we are trying to throttle with question limits. But a user who once a month gets stumped by a problem and then goes to Stack Overflow to ask it is not a help vampire but using the Q&A system responsibly, even if the questions aren't superior. If asking too many question is bad, then asking very few questions is not neutral, it's good. Furthermore spending any effort on infrequent askers is unlikely to make any significant dent in the problem while increasing the risk of false positives. False positives can be just as labor intensive as false negatives, as this case study aptly demonstrates.
If a user is asking questions at the rate of ten per year, then let's just allow the traditional "manual" mechanisms to detect misuse of the Q&A system: flagging, closing and migration. We should save the automated heuristics for the high and moderate volume offenders where the generous benefit of detection more than compensates for the risk of false positives.