AI-style calculators can be useful as a starting point for organizing questions, but they often miss the parts that decide value in a California personal injury case.
In practice, insurers look closely at:
- Causation: whether the medical record ties the brain injury symptoms to the Pittsburg incident.
- Consistency: whether your symptom reports match emergency notes, follow-ups, and treatment progress.
- Functional impact: how the injury affects your ability to work, drive, concentrate, and manage daily tasks.
- What’s actually provable: imaging, specialist findings, therapy records, and work/earnings evidence.
A calculator can’t verify whether your symptoms were objectively evaluated, whether a concussion clinic documented neurocognitive limitations, or whether a defense will argue an alternate cause. If the inputs are incomplete—or the model assumes a faster recovery than what your medical file shows—its “range” may be misleading.


