Think of AI tools as a way to organize variables, not as a substitute for legal valuation. A calculator may prompt you to enter details like diagnosis type, treatment duration, and symptom categories. That can help you notice gaps (for example, whether you have consistent documentation of cognitive issues).
But in real TBI claims—whether the incident happened near Texas A&M University, along a high-traffic corridor, or at a multi-unit residential property—settlement value usually turns on evidence quality:
- Medical proof that connects the incident to neurological symptoms
- Consistency between what you reported, what clinicians observed, and what treatment followed
- Functional impact, such as work performance, attention, memory, sleep, and mood
- Liability facts that can be disputed by insurance adjusters
AI outputs can’t verify that your medical records support causation, nor can they predict how an insurer will argue about gaps in treatment or symptom attribution.


