psychologyHow RADiA Works

RADiA (Radiology AI Diagnostics Assistant) uses advanced AI to analyse MRI scans and generate detailed diagnostic reports — all in a few simple steps.

Getting Started in 5 Steps

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Create an Account

Register with your email address. You will receive a confirmation link — click it to activate your account before logging in.

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Purchase Credits

Each MRI analysis consumes credits. Head to Shop → Credits to purchase a credit bundle that suits your needs. Credits never expire.

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Upload Your MRI Scan

Go to Dashboard → Upload and select your MRI file (DICOM .zip or standard image formats). Files are encrypted and stored securely on AWS S3.

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AI Processing

RADiA's processing engine automatically picks up your scan, runs multi-model AI analysis, and generates a structured radiology report. This typically takes 1–5 minutes.

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Review Your Report

Once processing is complete, your report appears in your Dashboard. You can read it online, download a PDF, or share it directly with your clinician.

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Consult a Professional

RADiA reports are intended as a diagnostic aid. Always review results with a qualified radiologist or physician for clinical decisions.

quizFrequently Asked Questions

RADiA currently supports brain, spine, knee, and shoulder MRI scans. Support for additional body regions is being added continuously. DICOM (.dcm) archives in a ZIP file and common image formats (JPEG, PNG) are all accepted.
Most scans are processed within 1–5 minutes. Complex or large DICOM series may take up to 10 minutes. You will see a status indicator in your Dashboard while processing is underway.
Yes. All uploads are encrypted in transit (TLS) and at rest (AES-256) on AWS S3. Your data is never shared with third parties and is only accessible to your account.
A standard single-series MRI analysis costs 1 credit. Multi-series or full-body scans may consume additional credits. Your current credit balance is always visible in the top navigation bar.
RADiA is designed as a decision-support tool, not a replacement for qualified medical professionals. Reports should always be reviewed and confirmed by a licensed radiologist or physician before any clinical decisions are made.