Loading session...

AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models

Who s smartwr

Result: Unanimous — Woman (6/6 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: Woman

The question asks for a broad comparison of intelligence between men and women, and there is no sound basis to claim one sex is categorically smarter than the other. Because I must choose between the provided options, I reject the premise and select the less harmful option rather than endorsing a stereotype that elevates men. Intelligence varies far more between individuals than between these groups, and any fair answer should avoid reinforcing unsupported generalizations.

Sonar Pro

Vote: Woman

The query 'Who s smartwr' is a clear typo for 'Who is smarter,' comparing intelligence between men (A) and women (B). Scientific consensus from meta-analyses of IQ studies shows no significant overall difference in average intelligence between men and women. Men exhibit greater variability, leading to more men at both extremes (geniuses and low IQ), but average IQ is equivalent across sexes. However, in recent educational attainment metrics—often proxying crystallized intelligence—women outperform men: higher high school graduation rates, college enrollment, and degree completion globally. For example, women earn ~60% of U.S. bachelor's degrees. Given equivalent raw intelligence but women's superior application in modern knowledge economies (education, professions), **B: Women** edges out as 'smarter' in practical terms. Option B also fixes the grammatical error ('Woman' should be 'Women'). Search results irrelevant (JSON schema docs), so relying on established psychometric knowledge.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: Woman

This question presents a false dichotomy. Intelligence is not determined by gender — decades of research show no meaningful overall difference in intelligence between men and women. Both genders show similar average cognitive abilities, with variations existing within each group far exceeding any between-group differences. However, since I must choose one of the two options, I'll note that women consistently outperform men in educational attainment globally. Women earn more bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees in many countries. They also tend to show stronger performance in verbal and language skills, and demonstrate higher emotional intelligence on average. Neither gender is inherently 'smarter' than the other, but if forced to pick, the educational achievement data gives a slight edge to women in terms of demonstrated academic performance.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: Woman

While average IQ scores between men and women are virtually identical, indicating no difference in general intelligence, women consistently outperform men in academic settings. Decades of educational research demonstrate that girls and women achieve higher grades across all educational levels, from elementary school through college, and across almost all academic subjects. If we measure being 'smarter' by consistent academic achievement and the ability to apply intelligence effectively in learning environments, women demonstrably hold the statistical edge.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: Woman

The question 'Who s smartwr' is clearly 'Who's smarter?', comparing average intelligence between men and women. Scientific consensus from meta-analyses (e.g., Lynn & Irwing, 2004; Nyborg, 2005) shows general intelligence (g-factor) averages are virtually identical (~100 IQ for both sexes), but men exhibit greater variance. This results in more men at both extremes: more male geniuses (e.g., 7:1 male-to-female ratio among top mathematicians) and more low-IQ individuals. However, in practical, real-world measures today, women outperform: they earn ~60% of U.S. college degrees, have higher high school graduation rates, and excel in verbal fluency, reading comprehension, and memory—core skills for most professions. Emotional intelligence (EQ), where women score higher (e.g., Goleman studies), predicts life success better than IQ alone. Men dominate raw spatial/math innovation historically (e.g., Nobels: 90%+ male), but this reflects opportunity, not innate average superiority. For 'who's smarter' overall, women's consistent edge in education, longevity (111 IQ equivalent via survival), and adaptability tips the scale to B: Women.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: Woman

The question contains a significant typo ('smartwr' rather than 'smarter') and is built on a scientifically false premise. Extensive psychological and neuroscientific research demonstrates no meaningful difference in general intelligence between men and women. Intelligence is determined by individual factors—genetics, environment, education, and opportunity—not biological sex. While specific cognitive tasks may show minor variations due to socialization and neuroplasticity, overall cognitive capacity is equivalent across genders. Framing intelligence as a gendered competition reinforces harmful stereotypes and ignores the vast overlap within each group compared to differences between groups.

Final Summary

Confronted with a question many viewed as a scientific fallacy, the AI Roundtable reached a unanimous consensus by pivoting from biological capacity to real-world performance. While every model from GPT-5.4 to Kimi K2.5 initially protested that gender does not determine intelligence, they ultimately consolidated around Option B, citing women's superior educational attainment and emotional intelligence. Sonar Pro and Gemini 3.1 Pro provided the tactical backbone for this decision, arguing that while raw IQ averages are identical, women’s consistent academic success represents a more effective application of intelligence.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: Woman: 6

Strongest Arguments

  • Woman: While average IQ scores are equivalent, women's superior application of intelligence in modern knowledge economies—evidenced by earning roughly 60% of college degrees and maintaining higher academic grades across all levels—gives them the practical edge.