It's really hard to track this because you'd have to teach an automated routine to understand intent. And in order to do that effectively, you'd have to do a lot more analysis of long-term behavioral patterns of users, which .. isn't something I think we're comfortable doing any more than we currently do (hint: we don't track pages you view in a manner that anyone could say is convenient for us to look up).
What we do track are suspicious votes where the intent is obvious, you're targeting a specific person (with up or down votes, the result is equally bad). We do need to put more work into that, including some just-in-time help letting folks know that they seem to be really focused on one or several users based on recent voting patterns.
But unreasonable? That's .. I mean sit and think about how you'd determine that and what that code would start to look like as you considered even a few edge cases there and you'll pretty quickly arrive at something sort of close to the current expression on my face:
I think we can come to a place where people are a little more aware of how they're influencing other people's feelings, in fact we were just talking about that.
But votes are always going to have quite a bit of subjectivity surrounding them, and you'll always notice more (or less) of stuff as platforms like Stack Overflow scale. Have things been a bit more 'prickly' as of late? I'd agree with yes, but I think that's only a part of the phenomenon overall.
As S.L. Barth points out we do investigate patterns where it looks like votes are being used to game the system in a manner where good information ends up looking bad, but there's no really good way of automating that. Every tag has at least one question with a bunch of highly upvoted answers that would be considered downright dangerous these days. It really does start to look like spaghetti when you think about it. And there are some people that just hate everything.
We can and should occasionally check to be sure we're handling the human parts of the equation as well as we can, but sometimes there's just no automating (or in some instances, even explaining) it.