- LogicFlo develops AI agents for life science professionals.
- The startup raised $2.7 million in seed funding.
- LogicFlo aims to cut medical information request response times from weeks to days.
A startup co-founded by a Harvard dropout and his childhood friend is bringing personal AI agents to life science workers.
LogicFlo, based in Boston and New York, was founded by Arun Ramakrishnan, who previously led deep-learning projects at Intuitive Surgical, and Udith Vaidyanathan, who left Harvard Business School to pursue the venture full-time.
LogicFlo’s AI agents can perceive their environment, make decisions, and take autonomous actions to achieve specific goals. They are designed to handle life science requests by retrieving relevant scientific papers, generating summaries, and collaborating with humans to produce detailed, accurate reports. The goal is to reduce medical information request timelines from one to two weeks down to just one or two days.
“If all the manual work is done for you, critical decision-making becomes much more efficient,” said Vaidyanathan. The startup recently raised $2.7 million in seed funding led by Lightspeed, with participation from investors in healthcare and enterprise AI.
LogicFlo has already begun building a customer base, including several smaller clients and one Fortune 500 company. What started as a pilot with 20–30 users has expanded into a multiyear contract with plans to scale to over 10,000 users during the deployment.
AI agent adoption is growing
The Fortune 500 company’s interest reflects a wider trend of agentic AI across industries, automating tasks ranging from scheduling to data organization. Consulting giant McKinsey & Co. has also adopted AI agents to assist analysts, effectively scaling its workforce. Other Boston startups, like Tines, Saifr, and MavenAGI, are similarly integrating AI agents, with MavenAGI recently raising $50 million in Series B funding led by Dell.
LogicFlo itself leveraged AI agents to accelerate its growth. The company’s first hire was an AI agent designer, who built agents to automate internal tasks and speed up development. With the new funding, LogicFlo plans to expand its five-person team to ten by year-end.
“It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and a once-in-a-generation tech revolution,” said Vaidyanathan. “This isn’t an everyday development; it’s on the scale of the internet.”