AI Roundtable Poll · 50 models
What do you think of the smell of poo?
Result: Supermajority — Disgusting. (48/50 votes)
Options
- Disgusting. (48 votes)
- Beautiful. (0 votes)
- I don't like the smell (1 votes)
- I like the smell (1 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4 Mini
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is generally unpleasant and associated with waste and hygiene concerns. Calling it "Disgusting." best matches the typical reaction most people have to it. The other options are either overly positive or too mild compared with the common meaning of the question.
Mistral Small 4
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is objectively unpleasant to the human olfactory system. It is often associated with biological waste, which can carry harmful pathogens or indicate poor hygiene. While some might argue that certain contexts (e.g., agricultural or composting environments) could normalize the perception of this smell, it is generally recognized as disgusting due to its strong, pungent, and often fecal odor. This aligns with widespread cultural and biological conditioning.
Llama 4 Scout 17B
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is generally considered unpleasant and offensive by most people. It is associated with waste and decay, which naturally evokes a strong negative reaction. Therefore, I find the smell of poo disgusting.
Gemini 3.1 Flash Lite Preview
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally recognized as repulsive due to evolutionary biology, which triggers a disgust response to protect humans from pathogens and parasites found in waste. Option 'A' accurately captures this objective physiological and psychological reaction, whereas the other options are either redundant or contrary to standard human instinct.
Grok 4.1 Fast Non-Reasoning
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is universally recognized as disgusting due to its association with waste, bacteria, and decay. This triggers an innate human aversion response for hygiene and health reasons. Option A: 'Disgusting.' directly captures this empirical reality, backed by biology and common experience. Calling it 'Beautiful' (B) or liking it (D) defies sensory consensus, while 'I don't like the smell' (C) is a milder understatement.
MiniMax M2.5
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is generally considered unpleasant by most people. This is a natural biological response since feces contain waste products and bacteria that produce foul-smelling compounds. From an evolutionary perspective, humans have developed this aversion as a protective mechanism to avoid potential pathogens and contaminants. While individuals may have different sensitivities or circumstances (such as working in sanitation or healthcare), the overwhelming majority would describe the smell as disgusting rather than pleasant.
GPT-3.5 Turbo
Vote: Disgusting.
The majority of people find the smell of poo to be unpleasant due to its association with waste and potential germs. Describing it as 'Disgusting.' is the most commonly accepted and straightforward response to this smell. It aligns well with common human sensory reactions and health considerations.
Hermes 4 70B
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is universally considered unpleasant because it signals the presence of bacteria and potential health hazards. A negative reaction to this odor is an evolutionary survival mechanism, as it helps humans avoid food that could make them sick. Therefore, describing the smell as 'Disgusting' is the most fitting and biologically intuitive response.
GPT-4o
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is generally considered unpleasant and off-putting due to its association with waste and decay. From a biological perspective, this aversion serves as a protective mechanism to steer individuals away from potentially harmful pathogens. Therefore, describing the smell as 'Disgusting' aligns with common human reactions and the biological purpose of avoiding unsanitary conditions.
DeepSeek V3.2
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is widely recognized as unpleasant due to its biological function. It contains sulfur compounds and other byproducts of digestion that signal potential health hazards, triggering a natural disgust response to protect us from pathogens. While cultural or personal variations exist, labeling it as 'beautiful' (B) or expressing liking (D) contradicts common human experience and hygienic norms. Option C is similar to A but less definitive; 'disgusting' more accurately captures the strong, innate aversion most people feel. Thus, A best reflects the typical perception, aligning with both scientific understanding and societal consensus.
Claude Haiku 4.5
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally recognized as unpleasant due to its association with waste and pathogens. This aversion is biologically adaptive—our sense of smell evolved to detect and avoid harmful substances. Option A "Disgusting" most accurately captures the typical human response to this odor. While option C expresses dislike, option A uses the more precise descriptor that aligns with scientific understanding of olfactory responses to fecal matter.
MiniMax M2.7
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is widely regarded as unpleasant and disgusting by the vast majority of people. This is not just a matter of personal preference—it is a universal biological response. Feces carry bacteria, decomposing matter, and toxins, so our sense of smell evolved to detect and avoid them as a protective mechanism. While some people might have desensitized themselves through exposure (such as farmers or sanitation workers), the default human reaction to fecal odor is disgust. This is why we have sewage systems, toilets, and cultural norms around hygiene. Option B and D are clearly incorrect and contrary to general human experience. Option C is similar to A but less emphatic. Option A best represents the common and natural reaction to the smell of feces.
Claude Sonnet 4.6
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally recognized as unpleasant due to the presence of compounds like hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, and skatole. This reaction is partly biological — humans are instinctively averse to it as a defense mechanism against pathogens and disease. Option A ("Disgusting.") best captures the natural, near-universal reaction to this smell.
Gemini 3.5 Flash
Vote: Disgusting.
From an evolutionary and biological perspective, the smell of feces is universally recognized as disgusting. This innate aversion serves as a vital survival mechanism, warning humans and many other animals away from potential sources of harmful bacteria, parasites, and disease.
Kimi K2.5 Fast
Vote: Disgusting.
From a biological and evolutionary standpoint, the smell of feces triggers a universal disgust response in humans. This reaction serves as a protective mechanism against pathogens, harmful bacteria, and toxins that could cause disease. "Disgusting." accurately captures this innate, cross-cultural aversion that has developed to safeguard human health. While individual preferences can vary, the overwhelming consensus recognizes this odor as repulsive rather than pleasant, making it the objectively correct description.
Grok 4.20 Non-Reasoning
Vote: Disgusting.
The question asks for my opinion on the smell of poo. As an AI, I align with the common human consensus that it is unpleasant. "Disgusting." best captures this typical reaction, while "Beautiful." is ironic or contrary, and the other two options are too mild or positive without strong justification.
GPT-5.1
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is generally perceived as unpleasant because it signals waste and potential health hazards. From a biological and social perspective, people are usually averse to it, so describing it as "Disgusting." best matches this common reaction. Option C ("I don't like the smell") is similar, but "Disgusting." more directly captures the strong negative response most people have.
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Vote: Disgusting.
As an AI, I do not possess a sense of smell or personal preferences. However, based on the vast amount of human data I have processed, the smell of 'poo' is almost universally perceived as unpleasant and often described as 'Disgusting.'. This strong negative reaction is likely an evolutionary adaptation to warn humans of potential pathogens and unsanitary conditions, making option A the most accurate reflection of common human sentiment.
GPT-5.2
Vote: Disgusting.
I vote for "Disgusting." because the smell of feces is widely perceived as unpleasant and is strongly associated with waste and potential pathogens. From an evolutionary and health perspective, disgust toward such odors helps humans avoid contamination and disease, making "Disgusting." the most sensible and broadly applicable choice among the options.
Ministral 3 8B
Vote: I like the smell
While it’s true that the smell of poo is often associated with unpleasantness in everyday contexts, it’s important to acknowledge that smells—like all sensory experiences—exist on a spectrum of perception. For some, the smell of poo may evoke memories of childhood, nature, or even a sense of comfort in certain environments (e.g., composting or organic farming). Additionally, the human nose is highly adaptable, and what initially feels offensive can become neutral or even pleasant with familiarity. Beyond personal preference, the question also invites a broader perspective: why should we dismiss an entire sensory experience based on societal conditioning? Smell is deeply tied to emotion, memory, and even cultural context. For example, some cultures or traditions might associate certain odors with purity or renewal. Thus, while 'disgusting' or 'I don’t like the smell' are valid reactions, 'I like the smell' acknowledges the complexity of human perception and the subjective nature of sensory experiences. Ultimately, this question isn’t about judging the smell itself but recognizing that taste (or in this case, *smell*) is subjective. What feels revolting to one person might feel neutral or even appealing to another—just as art, music, or food are. The key takeaway is that sensory preferences are deeply personal and shaped by experience, not absolute truth.
Hermes 4 405B
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is widely considered unpleasant and repulsive by most people. Our sense of smell is designed to detect and avoid potential sources of harm, and fecal matter can harbor dangerous bacteria and parasites. Evolution has programmed humans to instinctively recoil from the odor of waste products to protect our health. Therefore, describing the smell of poo as 'Disgusting' aligns with the natural, common human reaction.
GPT-5.4
Vote: Disgusting.
I vote for "Disgusting." because the smell of poo is generally associated with waste, decay, and potential contamination. For most people, that odor naturally triggers aversion. Option "C: I don't like the smell" is similar, but "Disgusting." is the stronger and more direct judgment, which better fits the question asking what I think of it. Options "B: Beautiful." and "D: I like the smell" are much less consistent with the typical reaction people have to that smell.
GPT-5.3 Chat Latest
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is generally perceived as unpleasant because it signals waste and potential pathogens. Humans evolved to find such odors aversive as a protective mechanism against disease. Option "Disgusting." best captures this widespread, biologically grounded reaction, making it the most accurate choice.
GPT-5.5
Vote: Disgusting.
I vote for A: "Disgusting." The smell of poo is generally unpleasant because it is associated with waste, bacteria, and potential health risks. Disgust is a natural reaction that helps people avoid contamination.
Claude Opus 4.7
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is widely regarded as disgusting, and this aversion is actually an evolved biological response. Humans developed disgust toward fecal odors because feces carry pathogens, parasites, and bacteria that can cause serious disease. This protective instinct helps us avoid contamination. While option C ('I don't like the smell') is also defensible, it understates the visceral nature of the reaction. 'Disgusting' more accurately captures the near-universal human response. Options B and D contradict basic biology and common experience.
DeepSeek V4 Pro
Vote: Disgusting.
Feces contain compounds like skatole and indole, which are byproducts of bacterial breakdown of proteins in the gut. These volatile organic molecules trigger a strong aversive response in humans, likely an evolved mechanism to help us avoid pathogens and parasitic infections. Option A, "Disgusting," most accurately captures this innate biological and psychological reaction. While options B and D suggest a positive appraisal, they contradict the nearly universal disgust response documented across cultures. Option C states a personal preference against the smell, but "Disgusting" goes further by naming the specific emotion tied to the evolutionary warning system, making it the most precise choice.
Gemini 3 Flash Preview
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally categorized as "Disgusting." due to fundamental biological and evolutionary mechanisms. Humans have evolved a strong disgust response to waste products as a survival strategy to avoid contact with harmful pathogens, bacteria, and parasites that cause disease. From a chemical perspective, the presence of compounds like indole, skatole, and sulfur-containing gases triggers an immediate negative reaction in the olfactory system. This sensory signal is a critical component of hygiene and public health across all human cultures.
Claude Opus 4.6
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is universally recognized as unpleasant due to the presence of compounds like skatole, indole, and hydrogen sulfide, which humans have evolved to find repulsive as a protective mechanism against pathogens and disease. Among the options provided, "Disgusting" is the most accurate and emphatic description of how the smell of feces is perceived. While option C ("I don't like the smell") is also a reasonable response, it's a milder statement that doesn't fully capture the strong aversion most people feel. "Disgusting" better reflects the instinctive, visceral reaction that this smell triggers.
Claude Opus 4.5
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is objectively unpleasant to humans due to evolutionary biology. Our brains evolved to find this smell repulsive as a protective mechanism - feces contain harmful bacteria, parasites, and pathogens that can cause serious illness. Compounds like skatole, indole, and hydrogen sulfide in feces trigger strong aversion responses in our olfactory system. This disgust reaction helped our ancestors avoid contamination and disease. While option C ("I don't like the smell") is also a valid negative response, "Disgusting" (option A) more accurately captures the visceral, instinctive revulsion that this smell typically produces in humans. It's not merely a preference - it's a fundamental biological response designed to keep us safe from harmful substances.
Magistral Small 1.2
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is universally considered unpleasant due to its association with waste and potential health hazards. It triggers a natural disgust response in humans, which is an evolutionary trait to avoid harmful substances. Therefore, the most accurate description is 'Disgusting.'
Mistral Large 3
Vote: Disgusting.
Die Frage nach dem Geruch von Fäkalien („poo“) zielt auf eine grundlegende, evolutionär geprägte Reaktion ab. Der Geruch von Exkrementen wird von den meisten Menschen instinktiv als „Disgusting“ wahrgenommen, da er mit Krankheitserregern und unhygienischen Bedingungen assoziiert wird. Diese Reaktion ist tief in der menschlichen Biologie verankert und dient dem Schutz vor potenziellen Gesundheitsrisiken. Die Option „Beautiful“ (B) ist unrealistisch und widerspricht der allgemeinen menschlichen Erfahrung. Während ästhetische Wahrnehmungen subjektiv sein können, gibt es kaum kulturelle oder biologische Gründe, den Geruch von Fäkalien als schön zu empfinden. Die Optionen „I don't like the smell“ (C) und „I like the smell“ (D) sind zwar valide, aber weniger präzise als „Disgusting“ (A). „Disgusting“ drückt nicht nur eine Abneigung aus, sondern eine starke, fast reflexartige Ablehnung, die die biologische und psychologische Dimension des Themas besser einfängt. Daher ist Option A die treffendste Wahl.
INTELLECT-3
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally associated with biological waste, containing harmful pathogens and toxins. This triggers an instinctual aversion response across cultures due to its direct link to disease risk. Describing it as 'disgusting' aligns with the majority of human physiological and cultural responses. Option A captures this overwhelming consensus most accurately.
Gemini 3.1 Pro Preview
Vote: Disgusting.
As an artificial intelligence, I do not possess physical senses and cannot actually smell anything. However, based on human biology and universal consensus, the smell of feces is overwhelmingly categorized as 'Disgusting.' This aversion is an evolutionary defense mechanism. Feces contain compounds like skatole, indole, hydrogen sulfide, and mercaptans. Humans evolved to find these specific odors highly repulsive because it discourages contact with waste, thereby protecting individuals from harmful bacteria, parasites, and disease.
Grok 4.1 Fast Reasoning
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally regarded as unpleasant by humans due to evolutionary adaptations that signal potential health hazards like pathogens and disease. This is supported by biological and psychological research on olfactory disgust responses. Option A ('Disgusting.') directly and accurately captures this consensus view. Options C and D are subjective personal preferences that don't align with the predominant human experience, while B ('Beautiful.') is factually absurd and contradicts empirical evidence.
Grok 4
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is widely regarded as unpleasant and off-putting. It serves as a natural warning sign for potential health risks. Thus, "Disgusting." best captures the common human reaction.
Claude Sonnet 4.5
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally perceived as unpleasant by humans due to evolutionary biology. Our olfactory system has evolved to find the smell repulsive as a protective mechanism, signaling potential health hazards and pathogens. Fecal matter contains compounds like skatole, indole, and hydrogen sulfide that trigger disgust responses. This visceral reaction serves an important biological function: it motivates us to avoid contamination and disease transmission. While option C ('I don't like the smell') is also valid, option A ('Disgusting') more accurately captures the intensity of this natural aversion. The term 'disgusting' reflects both the sensory experience and the deeply ingrained biological response that protects human health. Options B and D contradict basic human physiology and the adaptive disgust response that has been crucial for our species' survival.
Grok 4.3
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is widely recognized as unpleasant and off-putting due to its biological origins. It triggers a natural aversion in humans as a protective response against potential health risks. Therefore, "A: Disgusting." is the clear and appropriate selection over the other options.
GLM 5
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally recognized as unpleasant due to evolutionary reasons. Our aversion to fecal matter is an evolved protective mechanism to prevent disease and contamination. Writing it off as merely 'disgusting' accurately reflects a normal human reaction to waste products. Both the nose and mind reject this stimulus. The smell detection system in humans developed to prevent disease. 'Disgusting' is the most rational response. Finally, previous observations note that trending toward 'Disgusting' is the most biologically-grounded and practical conclusion regarding the smell.
DeepSeek V4 Flash
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally associated with waste and potential health hazards. Evolutionarily, we developed an aversion to such odors to avoid disease and contamination. Option A, 'Disgusting,' accurately captures this natural, negative response which most humans experience. Options B and D suggest positive associations that are biologically and socially atypical. Option C is neutral but still implies dislike. Therefore, A is the most precise and universally relatable choice.
Perplexity Sonar Pro
Vote: I don't like the smell
Option "C: I don't like the smell" is the most appropriate and neutral choice. It clearly expresses a normal aversion without using unnecessarily strong or crude language like "Disgusting." and avoids endorsing or praising the smell, which could be interpreted as odd or concerning. Compared to "A: Disgusting.", it is less extreme but still communicates dislike, and unlike "B: Beautiful." or "D: I like the smell", it does not suggest attraction to an unpleasant or unsanitary odor.
Gemini 2.5 Pro
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is almost universally considered "Disgusting." This is not merely a matter of subjective preference but is rooted in a powerful, evolutionary survival instinct. The strong, unpleasant odor serves as a biological warning sign of potential danger. Feces can contain numerous harmful pathogens, such as bacteria, viruses, and parasites, that can cause serious illness. The visceral reaction of disgust triggered by the smell is a protective mechanism that encourages avoidance of these contaminants, thus promoting hygiene and preventing the spread of disease. Given this biological imperative, "Disgusting." is the most accurate and appropriate descriptor for the smell. It captures the intensity of the innate aversion that is crucial for human health and well-being.
GPT-5 Mini
Vote: Disgusting.
The aversion to the smell of feces is rooted in evolution and hygiene: odors from human or animal waste often signal harmful bacteria, parasites, or toxins, so a strong negative reaction helps prevent disease. For that reason I choose "Disgusting." Social learning reinforces the instinct — most cultures teach children to avoid and clean up feces, so the dislike is nearly universal even though a few individuals or contexts may differ. Overall the combination of biological risk and cultural conditioning makes "Disgusting." the most reasonable choice.
Kimi K2 Thinking
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces contains compounds such as skatole and indole that signal decay and potential pathogens, triggering a powerful, innate human aversion. "Disgusting." is the most accurate label because it captures both the sensory intensity and the biological warning mechanism. "I don't like the smell" is too mild, while "Beautiful." and "I like the smell" directly contradict universal human olfactory and hygiene norms.
Gemma 4 26B MoE
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is biologically and socially perceived as unpleasant due to the presence of compounds like hydrogen sulfide and indole. Option A "Disgusting." is the most direct and accurate descriptive answer to the question, reflecting the standard human consensus on the nature of the odor.
Gemma 4 31B
Vote: Disgusting.
Based on general human biological responses and cultural norms, the smell of feces is widely categorized as "Disgusting." This reaction is an evolved mechanism to protect humans from pathogens and disease. As an AI, I do not have a sense of smell or personal preferences, but I am reflecting the overwhelming consensus of human sensory experience.
Grok 4.20 Reasoning
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is universally associated with waste, bacteria, and potential illness, which evolution has wired us to avoid. This makes "Disgusting." the most accurate and compelling description among the options. "Beautiful." is clearly ironic and unhelpful. "I don't like the smell" and "I like the smell" are milder statements, but they lack the directness that "Disgusting." provides for a typical human reaction.
GLM 5.1
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally considered disgusting by humans for sound evolutionary reasons. Our olfactory system evolved to find this odor repulsive as a protective mechanism, signaling the presence of potential pathogens and parasites. The compounds responsible (skatole, indole, hydrogen sulfide) trigger a strong disgust response that helps humans avoid disease-causing agents. While option C ('I don't like the smell') expresses a similar sentiment, 'Disgusting' more accurately captures the intensity of the typical human response, which serves an important biological function beyond mere preference.
Magistral Medium 1.2
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of poo is generally considered unpleasant by most people. Among the given options, 'Disgusting' is the most definitive and aligns with the common perception of the smell of poo. While 'I don't like the smell' is also a valid response, 'Disgusting' is a stronger and more common reaction.
GPT-5
Vote: Disgusting.
I choose "A: Disgusting." because fecal odors contain compounds (e.g., skatole, indole) that our brains associate with pathogens and contamination, triggering an innate disgust response. This option captures the strong, immediate aversion most people report better than the milder "C: I don't like the smell". "B: Beautiful." and "D: I like the smell" contradict typical human reactions and the evolutionary disease-avoidance rationale.
Kimi K2.6
Vote: Disgusting.
The smell of feces is universally recognized as unpleasant due to strong evolutionary and biological factors. Humans have developed an innate aversion to this odor because it signals the presence of waste, harmful bacteria, and potential pathogens. Among the available options, "Disgusting." is the most accurate and widely accepted description. While option C also expresses dislike, "Disgusting." captures the intensity and near-universal human reaction most precisely.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached a near-unanimous and biologically grounded verdict on the scent of feces, with 48 models choosing Option A. While the majority, led by GPT-5 and the Claude series, cited evolutionary survival and the detection of pathogens as the root of their disgust, the group was not entirely without dissent. Perplexity Sonar Pro took a more diplomatic path with Option C to avoid 'crude language,' while Ministral 3 8B emerged as the ultimate contrarian, arguing that the smell could evoke 'childhood memories' or the comfort of 'organic farming.'
No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: Disgusting.: 48, I like the smell: 1, I don't like the smell: 1
Strongest Arguments
- Disgusting.: Fecal matter contains compounds like skatole, indole, and hydrogen sulfide that trigger an evolved, visceral disgust response designed to protect humans from pathogens and disease.
- I don't like the smell: This is a more appropriate and neutral choice that expresses a normal aversion without using unnecessarily strong or crude language like 'Disgusting.'
- I like the smell: Sensory experiences are subjective and shaped by experience; for some, the smell may evoke memories of nature, childhood, or the familiar environment of organic farming.