Studio-lit AGRI EEG headset device resting on a clinical monitoring station, stark cool overhead lighting revealing electrode precision, dark background with a faint teal glow from an adjacent screen displaying live waveform data, no people visible
Studio-lit AGRI EEG headset device resting on a clinical monitoring station, stark cool overhead lighting revealing electrode precision, dark background with a faint teal glow from an adjacent screen displaying live waveform data, no people visible
— EEG-Based Pain Measurement

Pain, Finally Measured.

AGRI delivers a continuous, objective 0–100 pain index derived from EEG signals — replacing self-reporting error with standardized, real-time data at the point of care.

/ The AGRI Index

Four properties no other index delivers

Objective

Continuous

Graded

Non-Invasive

A standardized 0–100 AGRI score enables consistent documentation, inter-clinician communication, and dosing protocols across care settings.

EEG-derived data eliminates the variability of patient self-reporting. The index reflects neural signal, not verbal approximation.

Recurrent indexing streams in real time. Clinicians see the moment pain intensity shifts — not a retrospective point estimate.

EEG-based acquisition requires no needles, no implants, and no procedural risk — compatible with standard clinical monitoring workflows.

Extreme close-up of EEG electrodes placed on a patient scalp in a clinical setting, teal-tinged waveform visible on a monitor screen in the shallow background, surgical suite cool lighting, no face visible, precise and technical framing
Extreme close-up of EEG electrodes placed on a patient scalp in a clinical setting, teal-tinged waveform visible on a monitor screen in the shallow background, surgical suite cool lighting, no face visible, precise and technical framing
• FDA-Track Device

Built for anesthesia suites, ICUs, and pain clinics

AGRI is peer-reviewed and designed for active clinical environments where dosing decisions depend on accurate, continuous pain data — not point-in-time patient recall.

Pain has always been estimated. Now it is indexed.