It's random, based on how many reviews you're doing. If you suddenly gain access to a new queue and are doing more reviews, that'll increase your chances of being audited, but it's *still* random - and sometimes, folks get, uh, lucky (sic) and find themselves reviewing a whole heapin' pile of audits.

If you fail *enough* of them (where the value of "enough" depends on which queue you're in, how fast you're reviewing, etc.) you'll be asked to take a short break from review. If you come back and continue failing after the break, the next "break" will be longer, up to 30 days. 

Generally-speaking, treat audits as a reminder not to get in a rut: the UI for review was designed to allow very fast processing of fairly large amounts of information, which is usually a good thing - but it *can* tend to make one complacent, particularly when faced with a string of similar posts. Occasionally, you may find an audit you disagree with: that's ok - in a community as diverse as Stack Overflow, it's common to find areas where you disagree with others as to what policy should be in a given scenario. If a given audit strikes you as *particularly* egregious, feel free to bring it up here.

For more details, see: http://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/157121/what-are-review-tests-audits-and-how-do-they-work