“…Confirming the H2, the freshmen who use dysfunctional decision-making styles tended to postdate the tasks to do and how to do them; it means that the more the freshmen adopt strategies of decision-making ineffective for solving critical situations, the more they tend to procrastinate their choices about the realization of activities or the planning of behaviors to be adopted in various situations such as the academic context. Also in this case, these evidences are in line with the previous results found by Handayani and Andromeda (2017), Sagone and Indiana (2021), but incoherent with those of Santosa (2017); for instance, in the same academic context, Sagone and Indiana (2021) found that the more the university students tend to procrastinate their decisions, the more they are likely to adopt dysfunctional decision-making styles, and the doubtfulness and the delay are predominantly used by the Italian university students attending the Psychology and Pedagogy degree courses. On the contrary, the findings of Santosa revealed an insignificant inverse relationship between decision-making styles (measured using the GDMSQ: Scott, et al, 1995) and academic procrastination (analyzed with the APS: McCloskey & Scielzo, 2015).…”