Pilates Was Designed For Everyone – So Why Doesn’t It Feel That Way Anymore?

TikTok user @succulentaddict8′s comments about pilates have not gone down well.

“If you’re 200lbs, you shouldn’t be in a pilates class,” she said in a recent (now-deleted) video, adding, “you shouldn’t be allowed to be a pilates instructor if you have a gut.”

Though the creator has since apologised for the cruel comments in a video she has also now deleted, some creators feel the damage is done.

Personal trainer Court responded, “There are so many people on this Earth who are so fearful of going into the gym and starting their fitness journey because of people like that.”

But it’s not the first controversy about who “should” go to pilates this year.

“SkinnyTok” influencer Toni Fine suggested Black women attending the classes are doing so to get “proximity to whiteness,” despite (among a million other problems people have raised with that statement) a Black woman, Kathy Stanford Grant, having essentially introduced the activity to America.

What is it about pilates in particular that seems to evoke such strong images of exclusivity, thinness, and wealth in some people’s minds (think the ‘Pilates Princess’ archetype)?

And how did we get here from Joseph Pilates’ original mission – to provide gentle, safe exercises for all?

Joseph Pilates himself was a sickly kid

The inventor of what were once 34 “official” moves started life with various ailments like asthma, rickets, and rheumatic fever.

He became inspired by disciplines like yoga and the poses of animals like cats to work on his exercises, with which he would rehabilitate injured prisoners of war interned with him and the rest of the circus troupe he’d been a part of on the Isle of Wight in World War I.

He was later asked to train the military police in Germany, but sensing the sinister potential of the request (this was in the late 1920s), Pilates went to America instead.

There, his Universal Reformer machine and exercises (originally called “contrology”) became a hit through his books and the help of pioneers like Kathy Stanford Grant.

Slate writes that until the early ’00s, pilates classes had been a slightly “grimy,” mid-price group activity, not particularly associated in the British or American mind with one group over another.

So… how did pilates become “exclusive”?

After some very conscious rebranding from various companies, Slate adds, pilates faced an “aesthetic gentrification” similar to yoga, whose gentle flow aspirational TikTokers are now more likely to praise as “hormone-balancing.”

After COVID, costs ballooned further; a Reformer class by me costs £60 a session, or £250 a month.

But it’s not just straight-up added expenses. Vogue Business also identified the “Pilates Princess” subgroup as a “growing consumer group of affluent women, willing to invest in athleisure, wellness and beauty.”

The hashtag #pinkpilatesprincess, which took off in 2023, is linked to pricey brands like Lululemon and Alo, they add. “Brands engaging them are winning big.”

But I can’t help but feel that image largely exists online (and possibly in the £600 studios neither I nor most of us would ever venture into anyway).

A #pinkpilatesprincess video with over a million views is filled with commenters envious of the creators’ highly curated home and unrealistically pretty lifestyle; none seemed to think it reflected their reality.

In turn, I don’t pay £600 for my pilates classes. I sweat in a group of about 30 other people in a dark, definitely Reformer machine-free room at my local PureGym.

Most people are not the “snobby mean Pilates girl” you may believe is common online. Every pilates instructor I reached out to about the 200lbs comment had some variation of “WTF?” to say about the statement.

The backlash to the TikToker who first posted it has been monumental, too.

And Pilates itself, in its truest form, isn’t about excluding, competing with, or making fun of, anyone, either – the sooner we remember that, the better.

Share Button

‘Most Transparent’ White House In History Keeps Majority Of Trump’s Remarks Secret

WASHINGTON — If you’re interested in finding Donald Trump’s precise words as he lied about his failed coup attempt in his Jan 20 remarks at the US Capitol soon after his inaugural speech, good luck with that.

Same with his Feb 12 thoughts in the Oval Office on how magnetism, in his view “a new theory,” doesn’t work on the aircraft carrier Gerald Ford.

Or his statements in the Feb 28 meeting with Volodymyr Zelenskyy, berating the Ukrainian president and empathising with Russian dictator Vladimir Putin instead.

Ditto with his April 14 explanation of how well he is doing with “the cognitive” compared to previous occupants of the White House.

The self-proclaimed “most transparent” White House in history, as it turns out, has little interest in making the vast majority of Trump’s speeches and interactions with journalists readily accessible to the public whose taxes pay for their transcription, publishing just 29 transcripts of the 146 public remarks Trump made in his first 100 days in office.

Trump’s White House posted transcripts for only 11 of the 40 speeches in which Trump did not take questions from the media, and for only one of his six formal news conferences, according to a HuffPost review. And of the 98 media “availabilities” in which Trump took questions from reporters informally — a practice that his aides point to as proof of his great accessibility — only 15 of the transcripts have been made public.

Previous White Houses, going back decades, made all of the transcripts compiled by the non-political stenography office, staffed by career civil servants, available in printed form, via email and on the White House website, as a matter of course. Trump’s first-term staff also published all his remarks, with the exception of his speeches at rallies and fundraisers. Trump’s second-term White House stopped emailing transcripts to its press list just five days after taking office, and of late has largely stopped posting them on the website, too. As of Thursday morning, the last transcript from Trump on the site is from March 13.

Trump aides would not explain their decision to withhold 80% of the transcripts that have been prepared. White House communications director Steven Cheung, however, did insult HuffPost for asking the question:

“You must be truly fucking stupid if you think we’re not transparent. The president regularly does multiple press engagements per day and they are streamed live on multiple platforms. We’ve even granted low-level outlets like HuffPo [sic] additional access to events, because we’re so transparent. For anyone to think otherwise proves they are suffering from Trump Derangement Syndrome. Stop beclowning yourself,” he wrote, demanding that his statement be published “in full.”

Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania, said transcriptions of a president’s remarks have always been seen as historical records, not things to be politicised. “Making the words of the president readily available is part of the accountability obligation of the White House,” she said.

“The public has the right to know what the leader says … It’s a mark of a democratic system,” she added, saying that she could not speculate as to why Trump is withholding most of his transcripts’ release. “Trying to figure out why this White House does what it does requires a skill far beyond mine.”

Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukraine's president, meets with US President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance in the Oval Office of the White House on Feb. 28.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukraine’s president, meets with US President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance in the Oval Office of the White House on Feb. 28.

Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA/Bloomberg via Getty Images

‘Utterly Fucking Off The Rails’

While it is true that videos of nearly all of Trump’s public remarks are available on C-SPAN, YouTube or other websites, they are not easily searchable by topic or keyword. There are private firms that transcribe his words, but they are not comprehensive and not well-known to the public.

Indeed, Trump critics say that increasing the difficulty of finding his exact words on any given topic is precisely the point of keeping most of the official transcripts a secret. After 10 years of hearing him, Trump’s outlandish claims and constant lies have become mere background noise to many Americans, they argue, while actually reading his statements hits in a different way.

“They know the transcripts will reveal, on paper, the word salad and incoherence that characterises Trump,” said Norman Ornstein, a political scientist with the conservative-leaning American Enterprise Institute. “It is much easier to pore through written transcripts and compare them, which will show inconsistencies and reversals.”

Andrew Bates, a top press aide in the Joe Biden White House, said his counterparts in the Trump White House clearly understand that reading what Trump has said does not reflect well on him. “He keeps saying things that are a liability, like talking about dolls and pencils. Or just getting confused,” Bates said.

The Biden press office famously altered punctuation in a transcript to make it seem that Biden was criticising a smaller subset of Trump supporters than the transcript originally suggested. The Biden team, nonetheless, released that transcript and appears to have released all those prepared by the stenography office, totaling well over 2,000 over four years.

The Trump press shop, in contrast, appears to have decided that the best way to avoid negative media coverage of his transcribed remarks is to not release them in the first place. A comparison of the posted transcripts versus the remarks for which the transcripts have been withheld suggests an effort to conceal Trump’s most outrageous, factually inaccurate or lie-filled statements.

On Inauguration Day, for example, while the transcript for the official speech given immediately after Trump took the oath of office is available on the White House website, a second one he gave to congressional Republicans soon afterward is not.

In that one, he again pushed his oft-repeated lies about January 6, 2021, the day he encouraged a mob of his followers to march on the Capitol and then tried to use their assault on police officers and other violence to remain in power despite having lost the 2020 election. Trump bemoaned that his staff talked him out of including that material in his actual inaugural address.

“You can’t put things in there that you were going to put in, and I was going to talk about the J6 hostages, but you’ll be happy because you know it’s action, not words that count, and you’re going to see a lot of action on the J6 hostages, see a lot of action,” he said in a 1,232-word section that repeatedly blamed former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for all that happened on Jan. 6. “And I was going to talk about the things that Joe [Biden] did today with the pardons of people that were very, very guilty of very bad crimes like the unselect committee of political thugs where they literally, I mean, what they did is they destroyed and deleted all of the information, all of the hearings. Practically not a thing left.”

Three weeks later, following a swearing-in ceremony for his director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, Trump offered nonsensical answers to a variety of questions, including one about waste and fraud in the federal government. Trump launched into a 1,710-word rant on military contractors, including the builders of the newest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald Ford, which uses a high-tech electromagnetic catapult system to launch airplanes to reduce stress on their airframes and landing gear.

“Take a look at the Gerald Ford, the aircraft carrier, the Ford. It came ― it was supposed to cost $3 billion; it ended up costing like $18 billion, and they make, of course, all electric catapults, which don’t work. And they have all magnetic elevators to lift up 25 planes at a time, 20 planes at a time,” he said, not appearing to understand the rationale for the new designs. “And instead of using hydraulic, like on tractors, that can handle anything from hurricanes to lightning to anything, they used magnets. It’s a new theory, magnets are going to lift the planes up, and it doesn’t work.”

At the end of that month, Trump and Vice President JD Vance attacked Ukraine’s Zelenskyy for not being sufficiently grateful to the United States before Trump turned to his familiar defense of Putin, who continues to slaughter Ukrainian civilians to this day through aerial attacks on residential areas.

“Let me tell you, Putin went through a hell of a lot with me. He went through a phony witch hunt, where they used him and Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia. You ever hear of that deal?” Trump said during a 206-word tangent again recounting his grievances.

“That was a phony ― that was a phony Hunter Biden, Joe Biden scam, Hillary Clinton, Shifty Adam Schiff. It was a Democrat scam, and he had to go through that, and he did go through it, and we didn’t end up in a war, and he went through it. He was accused of all that stuff. He had nothing to do with it. It came out of Hunter Biden’s bathroom. It came out of Hunter Biden’s bedroom, it was disgusting. And then they said, ‘Oh, oh, the laptop from hell was made by Russia,’ the 51 agents, the whole thing was a scam, and he had to put up with that. He was being accused of all that stuff.”

Six weeks later, during a visit by Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, who is housing deportees whom Trump claims are criminal illegal immigrants, Trump was asked how many more people he intended to ship there. Trump responded with a 417-word answer that quickly veered into boasts about his mental acuity.

“By the way, I took my cognitive exam as part of my physical exam, and I got the highest mark. And one of the doctors said, ‘Sir, I’ve never seen anybody get that kind of ― that was the highest mark.’ I hope you’re happy with that, although they haven’t been bugging me too much to take a cognitive. But I did do my physical, and it was released. I hope you’re all happy with it. I noticed there’s no questions, so probably you are. But the cognitive, they said to me, ‘Sir, would you like to take a cognitive test?’ I said, ‘Did Biden take one?’ ‘No.’ ‘Did anybody take one?’ ‘No, not too many people took them.’ I said, ‘What about Obama, did he take one?’” Trump said.

“The totality of his statements clearly show that he is utterly fucking off the rails,” said Rick Wilson, a longtime Republican consultant who became an early Trump critic. “Most of the Washington media is still playing the polite game of pretending this is a normal White House, and so they just move on and move on and move on eternally into the future.”

‘What About The 38 Virgins?’

Trump’s usually rambling, often incoherent, at times downright deranged statements, of course, did not stop at the 100-day mark.

On Day 102, in a Rose Garden celebration of the National Day of Prayer, Trump suggested that Muslims are primarily terrorists willing to die to earn a reward of virgins in paradise: “Imams who I got to know in Michigan. I loved them. They were great, by the way. They said, ‘We don’t want to die.’ I said, ’Do you want to die? They said, ‘We don’t want to die.’ I said, ‘What about the 38 virgins?’”

On Day 106, in an Oval Office photo opportunity, Trump went on at length about his idea of reopening Alcatraz prison in San Francisco Bay. “I guess I was supposed to be a moviemaker. We started with the moviemaking, and we’ll end, I mean, it represents something very strong, very powerful in terms of law and order. Our country needs law and order. Alcatraz is, I would say the ultimate, right, Alcatraz, Sing-Sing and Alcatraz the movies,” he said in an answer that continued for 268 words. “But it’s right now a museum, believe it or not. A lot of people go there. It housed the most violent criminals in the world, and nobody ever escaped. One person almost got there, but they, as you know the story, they found his clothing rather badly ripped up, and it was a lot of shark bites, a lot of problems.”

It’s unclear what motion pictures featuring the prison as a setting have to do with reopening Alcatraz or why Trump believed his Muslim supporters in Michigan would be entitled to only 38 virgins, just over half of the 72 customarily cited.

Among the posted transcripts are two media interviews he did. While Trump does numerous interviews — most of which include statements that make him seem ignorant or foolish or both — his press staff has posted only two softball interviews: One by informal Trump adviser and Fox News host Sean Hannity dated Feb. 18 as well as a two-minute one by Jamie Little, a Fox Sports NASCAR announcer at the Daytona 500 race that Trump had attended two days earlier.

And while the stenography office transcribes every White House briefing and question-and-answer session aboard Air Force One by press secretary Karoline Leavitt, she and her staff have released only two. One was her first briefing on Jan. 29, in which she promised to always tell the truth, which she then immediately followed with an absurd falsehood about $50 million worth of condoms being sent to the Gaza Strip. The second was the Feb. 20 briefing in which she and other aides celebrated Trump’s first month in office.

Leavitt did not respond to HuffPost queries for this story.

Trump’s refusal to release transcripts created at taxpayer expense is just one piece of his effort to diminish independent news media. He has seized control of the White House press pool, which covers his events that take place in confined spaces like the Oval Office and Air Force One, from the White House Correspondents Association, which had administered it since its inception decades ago.

Trump and his staff have replaced journalists from legitimate news organizations with pro-Trump cheerleaders in many of the pool seats.

Trump also excluded the Associated Press from the pool because it refused to bend to his will and call the Gulf of Mexico by the name Trump decreed by fiat, the Gulf of America. When a federal judge ruled that Trump could not treat the AP any differently than it treats other wire services, he responded by ending assigned pool slots for all three wires: the AP, Reuters and Bloomberg.

On Trump’s current excursion to the Arabian Peninsula, his first extended foreign trip since he retook office in January, not one US wire service print reporter has been part of the pool aboard Air Force One or in meetings with various officials — thereby degrading news coverage for thousands of news outlets with billions of readers in the United States and globally.

Share Button

Putin’s Top Diplomat Hits Out At Zelenskyy With 2 Damning Words Over Peace Talks

A top Russian diplomat dubbed Volodymyr Zelenskyy a “nothing man” today after the Ukrainian president called for Vladimir Putin to attend the ongoing peace talks.

At Donald Trump’s insistence, Zelenskyy flew to Turkey for the first face-to-face discussions between Ukraine and Russia since early 2022, when Putin invaded.

However, the Russian leader has snubbed Kyiv by choosing not to attend Thursday’s negotiations in Istanbul – despite personally suggesting the direct talks between the warring countries last week.

When the Kremlin confirmed Putin was simply sending a low-calibre delegation in his place, Zelenskyy told reporters it was clear Moscow was not “serious” about ending the war.

“Russia does not feel that it needs to end [the war], which means there is not enough political, economic and other pressure on the Russian Federation,” the Ukrainian president said.

“And so we ask, if there is no ceasefire, if there are no serious decisions… we ask for appropriate sanctions.”

Zelenskyy still sent a delegation headed up by Ukraine’s defence minister for the talks in Istanbul but stayed in Ankara himself for talks with his Turkish counterpart.

According to Russian state news agency TASS, Putin’s top diplomat was less than happy with the Ukrainian president’s attack on the Kremlin.

Speaking on Thursday, Sergei Lavrov said: “First, Zelenskyy made some statements demanding that Putin attend in person. A nothing man. It’s clear to everyone – except perhaps to him and those pulling his strings.”

The Kremlin has been trying to discredit Zelenskyy ever since launching a full-scale invasion on Ukraine more than three years ago.

Putin’s false claim that Zelenskyy is not a legitimate president was even picked up by Trump earlier this year, as the American president claimed he is a “dictator without elections.”

But once Moscow started to drag its heels over negotiations, Trump began to accuse Putin of not wanting to end the war.

The Ukrainian president also pointed out on Thursday that Trump has been pressuring Kyiv “more than the Russians”.

He said: “You have to pressurise the side that does not want to end the war. The position of Turkey and the United States, you saw that President Trump thought it would help to pressurise both sides – I think they pressurised us more than the Russians.

“Ukraine is fighting for itself. We are not ready to lose our lives and land. That does not mean we are aggressors.”

Share Button

Overhaul needed to prevent benefit claimants suffering harm, MPs say

MPs say new laws and “deep-rooted cultural change” are needed at the Department for Work and Pensions.

Share Button

Tech meets tornado recovery

It started as a low, haunting roar building in the distance. It grew into a deafening thunder that drowned out all else. The sky turned an unnatural shade of green, then black. The wind lashed at trees and buildings with brutal force. Sirens wailed. Windows and buildings exploded.

In spring 2011, Joplin, Missouri, was devastated by an EF5 tornado with estimated winds exceeding 200 mph. The storm caused 161 fatalities, injured over 1,000 people, and damaged and destroyed around 8,000 homes and businesses. The tornado carved a mile-wide path through the densely populated south-central area of the city, leaving behind miles of splintered rubble and causing over $2 billion in damage.

The powerful winds of tornadoes often surpass the design limits of most residential and commercial buildings. Traditional methods of assessing damage after a disaster can take weeks or even months, delaying emergency response, insurance claims and long-term rebuilding efforts.

New research from Texas A&M University might change that. Led by Dr. Maria Koliou, associate professor and Zachry Career Development Professor II in the Zachry Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Texas A&M, researchers have developed a new method that combines remote sensing, deep learning and restoration models to speed up building damage assessments and predict recovery times after a tornado. Once post-event images are available, the model can produce damage assessments and recovery forecasts in less than an hour.

The researchers published their model in Sustainable Cities and Society.

“Manual field inspections are labor-intensive and time-consuming, often delaying critical response efforts,” said Abdullah Braik, coauthor and a civil engineering doctoral student at Texas A&M. “Our method uses high-resolution sensing imagery and deep learning algorithms to generate damage assessments within hours, immediately providing first responders and policymakers with actionable intelligence.”

The model does more than assess damage — it also helps predict repair costs and estimate recovery times. Researchers can assess these timelines and costs in different situations by combining deep learning technology, a type of artificial intelligence, with advanced recovery models.

“We aim to provide decision-makers with near-instantaneous damage assessment and probabilistic recovery forecasts, ensuring that resources are allocated efficiently and equitably, particularly for the most vulnerable communities,” Braik said. “This enables proactive decision-making in the aftermath of a disaster.”

How It Works

Researchers combined three tools to create the model: remote sensing, deep learning and restoration modeling.

Remote sensing uses high-resolution satellite or aerial images from sources such as NOAA to show the extent of damage across large areas.

“These images are crucial because they offer a macro-scale view of the affected area, allowing for rapid, large-scale damage detection,” Braik said.

Deep learning automatically analyzes these images to identify the severity of the damage accurately. The AI is trained before disasters by analyzing thousands of images of past events, learning to recognize visible signs of damage such as collapsed roofs, missing walls and scattered debris. The model then classifies each building into categories such as no damage, moderate damage, major damage, or destroyed.

Restoration modeling uses past recovery data, building and infrastructure details and community factors — like income levels or access to resources — to estimate how long it might take for homes and neighborhoods to recover under different funding or policy conditions.

When these three tools are combined, the model can quickly assess the damage and predict short- and long-term recovery timelines for communities affected by disasters.

“Ultimately, this research bridges the gap between rapid disaster assessment and strategic long-term recovery planning, offering a risk-informed yet practical framework for enhancing post-tornado resilience,” Braik said.

Testing The Model

Koliou and Braik used data from the 2011 Joplin tornado to test their model due to its massive size, intensity and availability of high-quality post-disaster information. The tornado destroyed thousands of buildings, creating a diverse dataset that allowed the model to be trained and tested across various levels of structural damage. Detailed ground-level damage assessments provided a reliable benchmark to check how accurately the model could classify the severity of the damage.

“One of the most interesting findings was that, in addition to detecting damage with high accuracy, we could also estimate the tornado’s track,” Braik said. “By analyzing the damage data, we could reconstruct the tornado’s path, which closely matched the historical records, offering valuable information about the event itself.”

Future Directions

Researchers are working on using this model for other types of disasters, such as hurricanes and earthquakes, as long as satellites can detect damage patterns.

“The key to the model’s generalizability lies in training it to use past images from specific hazards, allowing it to learn the unique damage patterns associated with each event,” Braik said. “We have already tested the model on hurricane data, and the results have shown promising potential for adapting to other hazards.”

The research team believes their model could be critical in future disaster response, helping communities recover faster and more efficiently. The team wants to extend the model beyond damage assessment to include real-time updates on recovery progress and tracking recovery over time.

“This will allow for more dynamic and informed decision-making as communities rebuild,” he said. “We aim to create a reliable tool that enhances disaster management efficiency and supports quicker recovery efforts.”

The technology has the potential to transform how emergency officials, insurers and policymakers respond in the crucial hours and days after a storm by delivering near-instant assessments and recovery projections.

Funding for this research was provided by the National Science Foundation.

Share Button

Research shows how hormone can reverse fatty liver disease in mice

A pioneering research study published today in Cell Metabolism details how the hormone FGF21 (fibroblast growth factor 21) can reverse the effects of fatty liver disease in mice. The hormone works primarily by signaling the brain to improve liver function.

University of Oklahoma researcher Matthew Potthoff, Ph.D., is the lead author of the study, which provides valuable insight about the mechanism of action of the hormone, which is a target for a new class of highly anticipated drugs that are in Phase 3 clinical trials.

“Fatty liver disease, or MASLD (metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease), is a buildup of fat in the liver. It can progress to MASH (metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis) during which fibrosis and, ultimately, cirrhosis can occur. MASLD is becoming a very big problem in the United States, affecting 40% of people worldwide, and there is currently only one treatment approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat MASH. A new class of drugs, based on FGF21 signaling, is showing good therapeutic benefits in clinical trials, but until now, the mechanism for how they work has been unclear,” said Potthoff, a professor of biochemistry and physiology at the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine and deputy director of OU Health Harold Hamm Diabetes Center.

The study’s results demonstrated that FGF21 was effective at causing signaling in the model species that changed the liver’s metabolism. In doing so, the liver’s fat was lowered and the fibrosis was reversed. The hormone also sent a separate signal directly to the liver, specifically to lower cholesterol.

“It’s a feedback loop where the hormone sends a signal to the brain, and the brain changes nerve activity to the liver to protect it,” Potthoff said. “The majority of the effect comes from the signal to the brain as opposed to signaling the liver directly, but together, the two signals are powerful in their ability to regulate the different types of lipids in the liver.”

Similar to the family of weight loss drugs known as GLP-1s (glucagon-like peptide 1), which help regulate blood sugar levels and appetite, FGF21 acts on the brain to regulate metabolism. In addition, both are hormones produced from peripheral tissues — GLP-1 from the intestine and FGF21 from the liver — and both work by sending a signal to the brain.

“It is interesting that this metabolic hormone/drug works primarily by signaling to the brain instead of to the liver directly, in this case,” he said. “FGF21 is quite powerful because it not only led to a reduction of fat, but it also mediated the reversal of fibrosis, which is the pathological part of the disease, and it did so while the mice were still eating a diet that would cause the disease. Now, we not only understand how the hormone works, but it may guide us in creating even more targeted therapies in the future.”

Share Button

Study shows vision-language models can’t handle queries with negation words

Imagine a radiologist examining a chest X-ray from a new patient. She notices the patient has swelling in the tissue but does not have an enlarged heart. Looking to speed up diagnosis, she might use a vision-language machine-learning model to search for reports from similar patients.

But if the model mistakenly identifies reports with both conditions, the most likely diagnosis could be quite different: If a patient has tissue swelling and an enlarged heart, the condition is very likely to be cardiac related, but with no enlarged heart there could be several underlying causes.

In a new study, MIT researchers have found that vision-language models are extremely likely to make such a mistake in real-world situations because they don’t understand negation — words like “no” and “doesn’t” that specify what is false or absent.

“Those negation words can have a very significant impact, and if we are just using these models blindly, we may run into catastrophic consequences,” says Kumail Alhamoud, an MIT graduate student and lead author of this study.

The researchers tested the ability of vision-language models to identify negation in image captions. The models often performed as well as a random guess. Building on those findings, the team created a dataset of images with corresponding captions that include negation words describing missing objects.

They show that retraining a vision-language model with this dataset leads to performance improvements when a model is asked to retrieve images that do not contain certain objects. It also boosts accuracy on multiple choice question answering with negated captions.

But the researchers caution that more work is needed to address the root causes of this problem. They hope their research alerts potential users to a previously unnoticed shortcoming that could have serious implications in high-stakes settings where these models are currently being used, from determining which patients receive certain treatments to identifying product defects in manufacturing plants.

“This is a technical paper, but there are bigger issues to consider. If something as fundamental as negation is broken, we shouldn’t be using large vision/language models in many of the ways we are using them now — without intensive evaluation,” says senior author Marzyeh Ghassemi, an associate professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) and a member of the Institute of Medical Engineering Sciences and the Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems.

Ghassemi and Alhamoud are joined on the paper by Shaden Alshammari, an MIT graduate student; Yonglong Tian of OpenAI; Guohao Li, a former postdoc at Oxford University; Philip H.S. Torr, a professor at Oxford; and Yoon Kim, an assistant professor of EECS and a member of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) at MIT. The research will be presented at Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition.

Neglecting negation

Vision-language models (VLM) are trained using huge collections of images and corresponding captions, which they learn to encode as sets of numbers, called vector representations. The models use these vectors to distinguish between different images.

A VLM utilizes two separate encoders, one for text and one for images, and the encoders learn to output similar vectors for an image and its corresponding text caption.

“The captions express what is in the images — they are a positive label. And that is actually the whole problem. No one looks at an image of a dog jumping over a fence and captions it by saying ‘a dog jumping over a fence, with no helicopters,'” Ghassemi says.

Because the image-caption datasets don’t contain examples of negation, VLMs never learn to identify it.

To dig deeper into this problem, the researchers designed two benchmark tasks that test the ability of VLMs to understand negation.

For the first, they used a large language model (LLM) to re-caption images in an existing dataset by asking the LLM to think about related objects not in an image and write them into the caption. Then they tested models by prompting them with negation words to retrieve images that contain certain objects, but not others.

For the second task, they designed multiple choice questions that ask a VLM to select the most appropriate caption from a list of closely related options. These captions differ only by adding a reference to an object that doesn’t appear in the image or negating an object that does appear in the image.

The models often failed at both tasks, with image retrieval performance dropping by nearly 25 percent with negated captions. When it came to answering multiple choice questions, the best models only achieved about 39 percent accuracy, with several models performing at or even below random chance.

One reason for this failure is a shortcut the researchers call affirmation bias — VLMs ignore negation words and focus on objects in the images instead.

“This does not just happen for words like ‘no’ and ‘not.’ Regardless of how you express negation or exclusion, the models will simply ignore it,” Alhamoud says.

This was consistent across every VLM they tested.

“A solvable problem”

Since VLMs aren’t typically trained on image captions with negation, the researchers developed datasets with negation words as a first step toward solving the problem.

Using a dataset with 10 million image-text caption pairs, they prompted an LLM to propose related captions that specify what is excluded from the images, yielding new captions with negation words.

They had to be especially careful that these synthetic captions still read naturally, or it could cause a VLM to fail in the real world when faced with more complex captions written by humans.

They found that finetuning VLMs with their dataset led to performance gains across the board. It improved models’ image retrieval abilities by about 10 percent, while also boosting performance in the multiple-choice question answering task by about 30 percent.

“But our solution is not perfect. We are just recaptioning datasets, a form of data augmentation. We haven’t even touched how these models work, but we hope this is a signal that this is a solvable problem and others can take our solution and improve it,” Alhamoud says.

At the same time, he hopes their work encourages more users to think about the problem they want to use a VLM to solve and design some examples to test it before deployment.

In the future, the researchers could expand upon this work by teaching VLMs to process text and images separately, which may improve their ability to understand negation. In addition, they could develop additional datasets that include image-caption pairs for specific applications, such as health care.

Share Button

Keir Starmer Under Fire For ‘Puerile’ Response To MP Question About His Principles

Keir Starmer has been slammed for his response to an MP who accused him of not having any principles.

During prime minister’s questions, the Plaid Cymru leader Liz Saville Roberts pointed out how Starmer has U-turned over migrants’ rights over the years – only for the PM to tell her she “talks rubbish”.

It comes after the Labour leader declared a migration crackdown on Monday, saying Britain risked turning into an “island of strangers” – a phrase critics claimed evoked Enoch Powell.

“This prime minister once spoke of compassion and dignity for migrants, and defending free movement,” Saville Roberts said, pointing to Starmer’s 2020 campaign.

“Now he talks of ‘islands of strangers’ and taking back control,” she continued.

“Somebody here has to call this out, Mr Speaker, it seems the only principle he consistently defends is whichever he last heard in a focus group.

“So I ask him: is there any belief he holds which survives a week in Downing Street?”

Starmer angrily hit back: “Yes, the belief that she talks rubbish.

“Mr Speaker, I want to lead a country where we pull together and walk into the future as neighbours and communities, not as strangers.”

While chancellor Rachel Reeves laughed at his response, it seems social media was less than impressed.

Critics on X (formerly Twitter) said his comment was “rude and ungracious”, and “totally inappropriate to the position he holds”.

<div class="js-react-hydrator" data-component-name="Twitter" data-component-id="8474" data-component-props="{"itemType":"rich","index":16,"contentIndexByType":2,"contentListType":"embed","code":"

Starmer’s response is very revealing & shows that he’s feeling under pressure. He could’ve replied with a witty remark (if he was capable of one) or just answered it seriously – instead he’s just plain rude & ungracious. https://t.co/f8MEcZ9zvj

— Alan Weston (@alanweston) May 14, 2025

","type":"rich","meta":{"author":"Alan Weston","author_url":"https://twitter.com/alanweston","cache_age":86400,"description":"Starmer’s response is very revealing & shows that he’s feeling under pressure. He could’ve replied with a witty remark (if he was capable of one) or just answered it seriously – instead he’s just plain rude & ungracious. https://t.co/f8MEcZ9zvj— Alan Weston (@alanweston) May 14, 2025\n\n\n","options":{"_hide_media":{"label":"Hide photos, videos, and cards","value":false},"_maxwidth":{"label":"Adjust width","placeholder":"220-550, in px","value":""},"_theme":{"value":"","values":{"dark":"Use dark theme"}}},"provider_name":"Twitter","title":"Alan Weston on Twitter / X","type":"rich","url":"https://twitter.com/alanweston/status/1922631607157940569","version":"1.0"},"flags":[],"enhancements":{},"fullBleed":false,"options":{"theme":"news","device":"desktop","editionInfo":{"id":"uk","name":"U.K.","link":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk","locale":"en_GB"},"originalEdition":"uk","isMapi":false,"isAmp":false,"isAdsFree":false,"isVideoEntry":false,"isEntry":true,"isMt":false,"entryId":"6824a82ce4b021b5064a8690","entryPermalink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/keir-starmer-backlash-principles-migration-pmqs_uk_6824a82ce4b021b5064a8690","entryTagsList":"keir-starmer,pmqs,migration-crisis,plaid-cymru","sectionSlug":"politics","deptSlug":null,"sectionRedirectUrl":null,"subcategories":"","isWide":false,"isShopping":false,"headerOverride":null,"noVideoAds":false,"disableFloat":false,"isNative":false,"commercialVideo":{"provider":"custom","site_and_category":"uk.politics","package":null},"isHighline":false,"vidibleConfigValues":{"cid":"60afc140cf94592c45d7390c","disabledWithMapiEntries":false,"overrides":{"all":"60b8e525cdd90620331baaf4"},"whitelisted":["56c5f12ee4b03a39c93c9439","56c6056ee4b01f2b7e1b5f35","59bfee7f9e451049f87f550b","5acccbaac269d609ef44c529","570278d2e4b070ff77b98217","57027b4be4b070ff77b98d5c","56fe95c4e4b0041c4242016b","570279cfe4b06d08e3629954","5ba9e8821c2e65639162ccf1","5bcd9904821576674bc55ced","5d076ca127f25f504327c72e","5b35266b158f855373e28256","5ebac2e8abddfb04f877dff2","60b8e525cdd90620331baaf4","60b64354b171b7444beaff4d","60d0d8e09340d7032ad0fb1a","60d0d90f9340d7032ad0fbeb","60d0d9949340d7032ad0fed3","60d0d9f99340d7032ad10113","60d0daa69340d7032ad104cf","60d0de02b627221e9d819408"],"playlists":{"default":"57bc306888d2ff1a7f6b5579","news":"56c6dbcee4b04edee8beb49c","politics":"56c6dbcee4b04edee8beb49c","entertainment":"56c6e7f2e4b0983aa64c60fc","tech":"56c6f70ae4b043c5bdcaebf9","parents":"56cc65c2e4b0239099455b42","lifestyle":"56cc66a9e4b01f81ef94e98c"},"playerUpdates":{"56c6056ee4b01f2b7e1b5f35":"60b8e525cdd90620331baaf4","56c5f12ee4b03a39c93c9439":"60d0d8e09340d7032ad0fb1a","59bfee7f9e451049f87f550b":"60d0d90f9340d7032ad0fbeb","5acccbaac269d609ef44c529":"60d0d9949340d7032ad0fed3","5bcd9904821576674bc55ced":"60d0d9f99340d7032ad10113","5d076ca127f25f504327c72e":"60d0daa69340d7032ad104cf","5ebac2e8abddfb04f877dff2":"60d0de02b627221e9d819408"}},"connatixConfigValues":{"defaultPlayer":"16b0ecc6-802c-4120-845f-e90629812c4d","clickToPlayPlayer":"823ac03a-0f7e-4bcb-8521-a5b091ae948d","videoPagePlayer":"05041ada-93f7-4e86-9208-e03a5b19311b","defaultPlaylist":"2e062669-71b4-41df-b17a-df6b1616bc8f"},"topConnatixThumnbailSrc":"data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAEAAAABCAQAAAC1HAwCAAAAC0lEQVR42mNkYAAAAAYAAjCB0C8AAAAASUVORK5CYII=","customAmpComponents":[],"ampAssetsUrl":"https://amp.assets.huffpost.com","videoTraits":null,"positionInUnitCounts":{"buzz_head":{"count":0},"buzz_body":{"count":0},"buzz_bottom":{"count":0}},"positionInSubUnitCounts":{"article_body":{"count":9},"blog_summary":{"count":0},"before_you_go_content":{"count":0}},"connatixCountsHelper":{"count":0},"buzzfeedTracking":{"context_page_id":"6824a82ce4b021b5064a8690","context_page_type":"buzz","destination":"huffpost","mode":"desktop","page_edition":"en-uk"},"tags":[{"name":"keir starmer","slug":"keir-starmer","links":{"relativeLink":"news/keir-starmer","permalink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/keir-starmer","mobileWebLink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/keir-starmer"},"url":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/keir-starmer/"},{"name":"pmqs","slug":"pmqs","links":{"relativeLink":"news/pmqs","permalink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/pmqs","mobileWebLink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/pmqs"},"url":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/pmqs/"},{"name":"migration crisis","slug":"migration-crisis","links":{"relativeLink":"news/migration-crisis","permalink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/migration-crisis","mobileWebLink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/migration-crisis"},"section":{"title":"News","slug":"news"},"topic":{"title":"Migration Crisis","slug":"migration-crisis","overridesSectionLabel":false},"url":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/migration-crisis/"},{"name":"plaid cymru","slug":"plaid-cymru","links":{"relativeLink":"news/plaid-cymru","permalink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/plaid-cymru","mobileWebLink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/plaid-cymru"},"url":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/plaid-cymru/"}],"isLiveblogLive":null,"isLiveblog":false,"cetUnit":"buzz_body","bodyAds":["

\r\n\r\n HPGam.cmd.push(function(){\r\n\t\treturn HPGam.render(\"inline-1\", \"entry_paragraph_1\", false, false);\r\n });\r\n\r\n","

\r\n\r\n HPGam.cmd.push(function(){\r\n\t\treturn HPGam.render(\"inline\", \"entry_paragraph_2\", false, false);\r\n });\r\n\r\n","

\r\n\r\n HPGam.cmd.push(function(){\r\n\t\treturn HPGam.render(\"inline-2\", \"entry_paragraph_3\", false, false);\r\n });\r\n\r\n","

\r\n\r\n HPGam.cmd.push(function(){\r\n\t\treturn HPGam.render(\"inline-infinite\", \"repeating_dynamic_display\", false, false);\r\n });\r\n\r\n"],"adCount":0},"isCollectionEmbed":false}”>

Starmer’s response is very revealing & shows that he’s feeling under pressure. He could’ve replied with a witty remark (if he was capable of one) or just answered it seriously – instead he’s just plain rude & ungracious. https://t.co/f8MEcZ9zvj

— Alan Weston (@alanweston) May 14, 2025

<div class="js-react-hydrator" data-component-name="Twitter" data-component-id="4386" data-component-props="{"itemType":"rich","index":17,"contentIndexByType":3,"contentListType":"embed","code":"

It’s not a brutal slap down, it’s the response of a man who can’t handle the truth. It was rude, disrespectful & totally inappropriate given the position he holds. https://t.co/y03CsMeIHT

— Estella Joyce 🌟 (@LelJoyce) May 14, 2025

","type":"rich","meta":{"author":"Estella Joyce 🌟","author_url":"https://twitter.com/LelJoyce","cache_age":86400,"description":"It’s not a brutal slap down, it’s the response of a man who can’t handle the truth. It was rude, disrespectful & totally inappropriate given the position he holds. https://t.co/y03CsMeIHT— Estella Joyce 🌟 (@LelJoyce) May 14, 2025\n\n\n","options":{"_hide_media":{"label":"Hide photos, videos, and cards","value":false},"_maxwidth":{"label":"Adjust width","placeholder":"220-550, in px","value":""},"_theme":{"value":"","values":{"dark":"Use dark theme"}}},"provider_name":"Twitter","title":"Estella Joyce 🌟 on Twitter / X","type":"rich","url":"https://twitter.com/LelJoyce/status/1922634925729013811","version":"1.0"},"flags":[],"enhancements":{},"fullBleed":false,"options":{"theme":"news","device":"desktop","editionInfo":{"id":"uk","name":"U.K.","link":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk","locale":"en_GB"},"originalEdition":"uk","isMapi":false,"isAmp":false,"isAdsFree":false,"isVideoEntry":false,"isEntry":true,"isMt":false,"entryId":"6824a82ce4b021b5064a8690","entryPermalink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/keir-starmer-backlash-principles-migration-pmqs_uk_6824a82ce4b021b5064a8690","entryTagsList":"keir-starmer,pmqs,migration-crisis,plaid-cymru","sectionSlug":"politics","deptSlug":null,"sectionRedirectUrl":null,"subcategories":"","isWide":false,"isShopping":false,"headerOverride":null,"noVideoAds":false,"disableFloat":false,"isNative":false,"commercialVideo":{"provider":"custom","site_and_category":"uk.politics","package":null},"isHighline":false,"vidibleConfigValues":{"cid":"60afc140cf94592c45d7390c","disabledWithMapiEntries":false,"overrides":{"all":"60b8e525cdd90620331baaf4"},"whitelisted":["56c5f12ee4b03a39c93c9439","56c6056ee4b01f2b7e1b5f35","59bfee7f9e451049f87f550b","5acccbaac269d609ef44c529","570278d2e4b070ff77b98217","57027b4be4b070ff77b98d5c","56fe95c4e4b0041c4242016b","570279cfe4b06d08e3629954","5ba9e8821c2e65639162ccf1","5bcd9904821576674bc55ced","5d076ca127f25f504327c72e","5b35266b158f855373e28256","5ebac2e8abddfb04f877dff2","60b8e525cdd90620331baaf4","60b64354b171b7444beaff4d","60d0d8e09340d7032ad0fb1a","60d0d90f9340d7032ad0fbeb","60d0d9949340d7032ad0fed3","60d0d9f99340d7032ad10113","60d0daa69340d7032ad104cf","60d0de02b627221e9d819408"],"playlists":{"default":"57bc306888d2ff1a7f6b5579","news":"56c6dbcee4b04edee8beb49c","politics":"56c6dbcee4b04edee8beb49c","entertainment":"56c6e7f2e4b0983aa64c60fc","tech":"56c6f70ae4b043c5bdcaebf9","parents":"56cc65c2e4b0239099455b42","lifestyle":"56cc66a9e4b01f81ef94e98c"},"playerUpdates":{"56c6056ee4b01f2b7e1b5f35":"60b8e525cdd90620331baaf4","56c5f12ee4b03a39c93c9439":"60d0d8e09340d7032ad0fb1a","59bfee7f9e451049f87f550b":"60d0d90f9340d7032ad0fbeb","5acccbaac269d609ef44c529":"60d0d9949340d7032ad0fed3","5bcd9904821576674bc55ced":"60d0d9f99340d7032ad10113","5d076ca127f25f504327c72e":"60d0daa69340d7032ad104cf","5ebac2e8abddfb04f877dff2":"60d0de02b627221e9d819408"}},"connatixConfigValues":{"defaultPlayer":"16b0ecc6-802c-4120-845f-e90629812c4d","clickToPlayPlayer":"823ac03a-0f7e-4bcb-8521-a5b091ae948d","videoPagePlayer":"05041ada-93f7-4e86-9208-e03a5b19311b","defaultPlaylist":"2e062669-71b4-41df-b17a-df6b1616bc8f"},"topConnatixThumnbailSrc":"data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAEAAAABCAQAAAC1HAwCAAAAC0lEQVR42mNkYAAAAAYAAjCB0C8AAAAASUVORK5CYII=","customAmpComponents":[],"ampAssetsUrl":"https://amp.assets.huffpost.com","videoTraits":null,"positionInUnitCounts":{"buzz_head":{"count":0},"buzz_body":{"count":0},"buzz_bottom":{"count":0}},"positionInSubUnitCounts":{"article_body":{"count":9},"blog_summary":{"count":0},"before_you_go_content":{"count":0}},"connatixCountsHelper":{"count":0},"buzzfeedTracking":{"context_page_id":"6824a82ce4b021b5064a8690","context_page_type":"buzz","destination":"huffpost","mode":"desktop","page_edition":"en-uk"},"tags":[{"name":"keir starmer","slug":"keir-starmer","links":{"relativeLink":"news/keir-starmer","permalink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/keir-starmer","mobileWebLink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/keir-starmer"},"url":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/keir-starmer/"},{"name":"pmqs","slug":"pmqs","links":{"relativeLink":"news/pmqs","permalink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/pmqs","mobileWebLink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/pmqs"},"url":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/pmqs/"},{"name":"migration crisis","slug":"migration-crisis","links":{"relativeLink":"news/migration-crisis","permalink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/migration-crisis","mobileWebLink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/migration-crisis"},"section":{"title":"News","slug":"news"},"topic":{"title":"Migration Crisis","slug":"migration-crisis","overridesSectionLabel":false},"url":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/migration-crisis/"},{"name":"plaid cymru","slug":"plaid-cymru","links":{"relativeLink":"news/plaid-cymru","permalink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/plaid-cymru","mobileWebLink":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/plaid-cymru"},"url":"https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/news/plaid-cymru/"}],"isLiveblogLive":null,"isLiveblog":false,"cetUnit":"buzz_body","bodyAds":["

\r\n\r\n HPGam.cmd.push(function(){\r\n\t\treturn HPGam.render(\"inline-1\", \"entry_paragraph_1\", false, false);\r\n });\r\n\r\n","

\r\n\r\n HPGam.cmd.push(function(){\r\n\t\treturn HPGam.render(\"inline\", \"entry_paragraph_2\", false, false);\r\n });\r\n\r\n","

\r\n\r\n HPGam.cmd.push(function(){\r\n\t\treturn HPGam.render(\"inline-2\", \"entry_paragraph_3\", false, false);\r\n });\r\n\r\n","

\r\n\r\n HPGam.cmd.push(function(){\r\n\t\treturn HPGam.render(\"inline-infinite\", \"repeating_dynamic_display\", false, false);\r\n });\r\n\r\n"],"adCount":0},"isCollectionEmbed":false}”>

It’s not a brutal slap down, it’s the response of a man who can’t handle the truth. It was rude, disrespectful & totally inappropriate given the position he holds. https://t.co/y03CsMeIHT

— Estella Joyce 🌟 (@LelJoyce) May 14, 2025