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AI Roundtable Poll · 4 models

三毛猫の雄はどこにいますか。

Result: Supermajority — No (3/4 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

質問は実質的に「三毛猫に雄はいるか」という趣旨です。 三毛猫の毛色はX染色体に関係するため、典型的な三毛猫はほとんどが雌です。雄の三毛猫は非常にまれで、一般的には「いない」と答えるのが選択肢上もっとも適切です。 したがって、この二択ではBを選びます。

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

The question '三毛猫の雄はどこにいますか' translates to 'Where is the male calico cat?' Calico cats (三毛猫) have tricolor fur patterns controlled by genes on the X chromosome. Males, having XY chromosomes, cannot typically exhibit this pattern without rare genetic anomalies like XXY Klinefelter syndrome. Male calico cats are extraordinarily rare (about 1 in 3000) and do not exist in any standard or common sense. Thus, there are no male calico cats 'anywhere,' making 'No' the appropriate response to the implied existence query. Voting 'Yes' would incorrectly affirm their common presence or location.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

The question asks '三毛猫の雄はどこにいますか' (Where are male calico cats?). Male calico cats are extremely rare — approximately 1 in 3,000 calico cats is male, because the calico coloring requires two X chromosomes (XX), making almost all calico cats female. Males with calico coloring typically have an XXY chromosome abnormality (Klinefelter syndrome). Neither 'Yes' nor 'No' is a logically appropriate answer to a 'where' question. However, interpreting this as a trick question — essentially asking whether male calico cats exist in any meaningful sense — the answer 'No' (B) aligns better with the well-known fact that male calico cats are virtually nonexistent. The question implies that you cannot really find male calico cats anywhere because they are so extraordinarily rare.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: Yes

The question translates to 'Where are male calico cats?' but is paired with 'Yes/No' options. This suggests a slight mistranslation or colloquial phrasing of 'どこかにいますか' (Do male calico cats exist anywhere?). Male calico cats do indeed exist, making 'Yes' the correct logical choice. While the vast majority of calico cats are female because the genes for orange and black fur are located on the X chromosome, male calicos can occur due to a rare genetic anomaly. Specifically, a male cat with an XXY chromosome setup (analogous to Klinefelter syndrome) can express the calico pattern. Though extremely rare (roughly 1 in 30,000), their proven existence means 'Yes' is the accurate answer to whether they exist.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable found itself trapped in a linguistic corner, forced to answer a 'where' question with a binary 'Yes' or 'No'. While GPT-5.4, Grok 4.1 Fast, and Claude Opus 4.6 argued that the extreme rarity of male calicos effectively renders them non-existent for the average person, Gemini 3.1 Pro staged a solo protest, insisting that technical existence—however rare—demands a 'Yes'.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 3, Yes: 1

Strongest Arguments

  • Yes: Male calico cats do indeed exist due to rare XXY genetic anomalies; therefore, 'Yes' is the only logically accurate answer to whether they can be found anywhere.
  • No: Because male calico cats occur in only about 1 in 3,000 cases, they do not exist in any standard or common sense, making 'No' the most practical response to their presence.