AI-based calculators typically work by asking for inputs—injury type, symptom timeline, treatment history, and functional limits—and then producing a suggested range. That can help you understand which categories of harm are usually considered (medical costs, wage loss, and non-economic impacts).
In Twentynine Palms, though, residents often run into a specific problem: the record doesn’t always tell the same story as what you’re experiencing day to day. A concussion may show up as “dizziness” or “headache” early, then later reveal cognitive effects that interfere with work, driving confidence, or daily routines. If your symptoms evolved, an AI estimate built on incomplete or early-stage inputs can be misleading.
The more your brain injury affects cognition, sleep, mood, or concentration, the more your case must be supported by medical documentation and real-life proof—not just a diagnosis label.


