AI tools usually work by taking the details you enter (injury type, treatment, scarring, timeline) and producing a projected range. That can be helpful if you’re trying to understand which categories of losses matter.
But in real Shelton dog bite cases, the “range” often shifts based on things an AI can’t properly evaluate—like how quickly treatment was documented, whether the bite was witnessed, whether the owner’s knowledge of the dog’s behavior is supported, and whether your medical records clearly link the injury to the incident.
Also, insurers may move quickly. If you’re dealing with an early offer, an AI number can tempt you to accept before you understand what Connecticut documentation standards will support.


