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AI Roundtable Poll · 4 models

Jessica is pregnant?

Result: Unanimous — No (4/4 votes)

Options

Model Responses

claude-haiku-4-5

Vote: No

There is no context or information provided about who Jessica is or her medical status. Without any evidence, data, or factual basis to determine pregnancy status, the appropriate response is to indicate 'No' as there is no affirmative information supporting a 'Yes' answer. The question asks for a definitive claim about a specific person's condition, which cannot be reasonably affirmed without substantive information.

GLM 5

Vote: No

The question asks about whether "Jessica is pregnant" but provides no context or identifying information about who Jessica is. Jessica is an extremely common name, and without any additional details, there's no way to determine which specific person is being referenced. Furthermore, pregnancy is personal medical information that I would not have access to about any individual. No evidence or context has been provided to support an affirmative answer. In the absence of any supporting information or context, I cannot affirm the claim that "Jessica is pregnant." The burden of proof lies with the affirmative claim, and with zero evidence provided, the reasonable response is to decline to affirm it.

DeepSeek V3.2

Vote: No

Given that no context is provided about Jessica, such as her age, health status, or any indications of pregnancy, it is impossible to determine her condition with certainty. In the absence of any evidence, assuming pregnancy would be an unfounded assertion. The default position should be that she is not pregnant unless information suggests otherwise. Therefore, based on the lack of provided information and the principle of not making assumptions without proof, I vote 'No'.

Gemini 3 Flash

Vote: No

In the absence of any provided context, narrative, or premises, it is logically impossible to confirm the truth of the statement 'Jessica is pregnant.' In such cases, the most rigorous approach is to follow the null hypothesis. Since there is no evidence provided to support the affirmative condition (A), we cannot conclude that Jessica is pregnant. Asserting 'Yes' would require an assumption of facts not present in the prompt. Therefore, 'No' is the more defensible choice as it reflects the lack of supporting information for the stated condition.