Think of an AI calculator as a question organizer, not a valuation tool. It may sort inputs like injury type, symptom duration, treatment history, and work impact—then generate a rough range.
But in real injury claims, especially for traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases, outcome depends on details AI often can’t accurately measure, such as:
- whether your symptoms were documented promptly after the crash or incident
- whether your treatment plan was followed consistently (or explained when it wasn’t)
- whether objective testing (when available) supports the neurological complaints
- how well your records connect the accident to your continuing symptoms
In Pea Ridge, where many residents commute and rely on physical and cognitive performance—driving, working, managing family responsibilities—those functional impacts matter just as much as the diagnosis label.


