The Development Value Index (DVI) is a multi-dimensional infrastructure designed to map human stability, systemic pressure, and growth velocity.
Strong Stability and Growth, low active Load, and intact Support continuity.
Most institutional systems treat people as a singular risk score. We believe scoring is an act of surveillance, not support. DVI replaces judgmental numbers with explainable posture, a transparent mapping of the external drivers shaping a person's life.
Developed within the University of Trento School of Innovation ecosystem to bridge the gap between academic sociology and predictive technology.
Verify Academic Support →Explainability: Users see the specific drivers, such as housing friction or visa delay, impacting their posture in real time.
Continuity: Posture is not a snapshot. It is a preserved history of resilience, pressure, and intervention.
Dignity: Support is triggered by context, not by collapse.
Measures administrative continuity and readiness. This is the foundation of a person's legal and documented standing within a system.
Instability in documents is the leading cause of invisible load. When a student is worried about residency continuity, their academic growth halts. Stability is the floor upon which progress is built.
Quantifies timing friction and active pressure. It identifies when the weight of life is about to exceed the user's capacity for progress.
Load is the most predictive DVI signal. A spike in Load is the silent alarm that sounds weeks before a student misses an exam or a worker disengages. This is where institutions save outcomes.
Measures forward momentum, opportunity capture, and the conversion of effort into academic, social, and economic progress.
Growth is what proves that systems are helping rather than stalling human potential. DVI shows whether people are moving forward or quietly losing momentum under pressure.
Tracks whether help is actually reachable, continuous, and capable of following through across transitions, offices, and intervention cycles.
Support is not a soft layer. It is an operational determinant. Where support continuity breaks, stability and growth collapse soon after. DVI makes that visible before institutions lose the window to act.
The user sees which pressure is structural, which pressure is temporary, and where the next action should be focused.
Universities and public bodies can identify cohort-level load spikes and route support before administrative failure becomes visible.
Employers can protect onboarding, reduce invisible-life-load risk, and avoid preventable turnover among young talent and newcomers.
By monitoring aggregate DVI signals, universities and municipalities can identify load spikes in specific cohorts, such as first-year migrants or students in housing friction. This allows support routing 21 days earlier than traditional administrative triggers.
DVI signals appear roughly 3 weeks before traditional administrative failure points.