Consumption of alcohol during pregnancy is well recognized as a risk factor associated with adverse fetal development. While precise safe or dangerous levels of maternal drinking have not been identified, it is clear that the women who drink most heavily are at the greatest risk. Prevention of alcohol-related birth defects requires development of programs directed to the special needs of addicted women and their families. The nature of addiction suggests that direct interventions focused on changing individual drinking behavior have the best chance of success.
From recent decades, the phenomenon of globalization is affecting the business model of companies, evolving into a global market that seeks to reduce costs, increase productivity and competitive advantage. The companies engaged in software development are no strangers to this phenomenon, and also being adapted to develop the software in a distributed way at different development teams scattered around the world. This is known as Global Software Development (GSD). This software development paradigm introduces a number of advantages for companies that follow it, but also introduces a number of difficulties and challenges associated with geographical, temporal and socio-cultural distances. One of the major difficulties appears in the Knowledge and Decisions Management as in GSD information comes from many different sources, which makes its management, storage and reuse very complicated. In order to mitigate some of these challenges, we have developed a tool to support the decisions management made in software projects, in the context of global development. Therefore, the system enables the creation, storage, retrieval and transmission of decisions tackled in a software project, carried out in a delocalized way. In addition, the tool allows project managers manage the information of software projects and the most important value is that it also provides techniques to reuse the decisions taken in previous projects into new projects with similar characteristics.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.