2012
DOI: 10.1037/a0029155
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The adaptability of Career Decision-Making Profiles.

Abstract: The Career Decision-Making Profiles questionnaire (CDMP; Gati, Landman, Davidovitch, Asulin-Peretz, & Gadassi, 2010) uses a new model for characterizing the way individuals make decisions based on the simultaneous use of 11 dimensions. The present study investigated which pole of each dimension is more adaptive. Using the data of 383 young adults who were about to make a career choice, we assessed the individuals' decision status and the associations of the dimensions Emotional and Personality-related Career d… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(82 citation statements)
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“…The regression analyses, which tested whether there are dimensions that predict difficulties beyond the CDA, revealed that across samples and difficulty clusters the CDA captured most of the variance in the prediction of career decision-making difficulties with no more than one other dimension as an additional predictor, indicating the importance of career decision adaptability for predicting fewer difficulties. Furthermore, these associations are compatible with the results of Gadassi et al (2012), who found that these dimensions of the CDMP were associated with fewer emotional and personality-related career decision-making difficulties. (Yi & Park, 2003), where one tends to forgo one's own goals for the sake of the goals of the group, and see one's own fate as intertwined with that of the group (Triandis, 1990).…”
Section: Cross-cultural Analysis Of Career Decision Making 20supporting
confidence: 80%
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“…The regression analyses, which tested whether there are dimensions that predict difficulties beyond the CDA, revealed that across samples and difficulty clusters the CDA captured most of the variance in the prediction of career decision-making difficulties with no more than one other dimension as an additional predictor, indicating the importance of career decision adaptability for predicting fewer difficulties. Furthermore, these associations are compatible with the results of Gadassi et al (2012), who found that these dimensions of the CDMP were associated with fewer emotional and personality-related career decision-making difficulties. (Yi & Park, 2003), where one tends to forgo one's own goals for the sake of the goals of the group, and see one's own fate as intertwined with that of the group (Triandis, 1990).…”
Section: Cross-cultural Analysis Of Career Decision Making 20supporting
confidence: 80%
“…career decision-making styles; Gati, Gadassi, & MashiahCohen, 2012). Specifically, the CDMP makes it possible to assess individual differences while simultaneously considering the following 12 dimensions (Gati et al, 2010;Gati & Levin, 2012): (Gadassi, Gati, & Dayan, 2012;Gadassi, Gati, & Wagman-Rolnick, 2013). Based on these six dimensions, Gati and Levin (2012) defined a measure of Career Decision-Making Adaptability (CDA).…”
Section: Career Decision-making Profilesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Contrary to our expectations, introjected regulation predicted not only maladaptive tendencies for dependence on others and desire to please them, but also consulting one's career choices with others and preference for adaptive aspiration for ideal occupation. Since neither rare nor frequent consultation with others was proved to be more or less adaptive in previous research (Gadassi et al, 2012(Gadassi et al, , 2013, the conclusion whether and when introjected individuals consult with others in adaptive or maladaptive ways remains an open question. As to high aspiration for ideal occupation, it is possible that there are some, yet uninvestigated personality or social factors affecting preference for this strategy in introjected individuals.…”
Section: Self-determination and Career Decisionmaking Strategiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only the level of consulting with others did not matter with regard to the above mentioned criteria (Gadassi, Gati, & Dayan, 2012;Gadassi, Gati, & Wagman-Rolnick, 2013). Moreover, in our previous research, based on the assumption that within CDM framework, core measures of subjective well-being are decision-making satisfaction and decision-making regret (DeHaan, Weinstein, & Deci, 2013), we found that CDMSs that were proved to be adaptive or maladaptive in studies by Gadassi et al (2012Gadassi et al ( , 2013, were equally adaptive or maladaptive, according to these two other-than-rational emotion-related criteria (Látalová & Pilárik, in press). …”
Section: Adaptiveness Of Specific Career Decisionmaking Strategiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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