The Misalignment You Cannot Name
You have taken the personality tests. You have completed the strengths inventories. You may have filled out questionnaires that returned neatly labeled profiles telling you what kind of professional you are. And still, something does not align. The results feel partially true but fundamentally incomplete — as if the assessment captured an outline of who you are without ever reaching the substance.
This is the experience that brings high-performing professionals to seek career assessment in Beverly Hills. Not uncertainty about their skills. Not confusion about the job market. Something deeper: a persistent gap between what assessment tools report and what they actually feel about their professional identity. They have succeeded by external metrics. They hold titles, manage teams, close deals. Yet the question lingers — whether this career was built on authentic alignment or accumulated momentum.
What I see repeatedly in this work is professionals who have optimized around the wrong signal for years. The conventional assessment model measures behavioral outputs — how you tend to act, what you say you prefer, which environments you gravitate toward. It asks you to describe yourself and then organizes those descriptions into categories. The problem is not that these tools are inaccurate. The problem is that they measure the product of your self-concept without ever examining the machinery producing it. When that machinery has been shaped by industry pressure, status expectations, or two decades of reinforcement in a single professional ecosystem, the outputs it generates may reflect adaptation rather than authenticity.
For professionals navigating entertainment, venture capital, creative industries, and high-stakes professional environments, the distinction between adapted identity and authentic identity is not philosophical. It determines whether the next career move produces genuine satisfaction or another cycle of externally validated misalignment.
The Neuroscience of Career Identity
Career identity is not an abstraction. It is a biological structure maintained by specific neural systems — and understanding those systems changes everything about how assessment should work.
The default mode network is the brain's primary system for self-referential processing. A comprehensive review of this system reveals that a network spanning the medial prefrontal cortex, posterior cingulate cortex, and left angular gyrus activates above resting baseline when individuals evaluate self-descriptive traits. When you ask yourself whether you are ambitious, creative, or strategic, these regions perform the computation. The mPFC differentiates self from others and handles evaluative processing. The posterior cingulate cortex acts as a hub that coordinates connected nodes. The left angular gyrus retrieves semantic and personal information from long-term memory. Together, they construct what researchers describe as a coherent "internal narrative" — the running story you tell yourself about who you are, what you value, and what you believe.
This narrative is not static. It is continuously reconstructed based on available memory, social feedback, and environmental signals. When your professional environment changes — an industry contracts, a company restructures, a role disappears — the DMN must update that narrative. When it cannot, you experience the gap between who you were and who you are as confusion, paralysis, or a persistent sense of misalignment.

Research extends this framework with a finding directly relevant to career assessment. The DMN's responses are individually idiosyncratic — modulated by personal priors, long-term memories, beliefs, and schemas. Two professionals with identical career histories, identical psychometric profiles, and identical industry experience will have meaningfully different neural representations of career identity. Standardized assessment tools cannot capture this idiosyncrasy. They measure category membership. The brain encodes individuality.
Perhaps most critically, researchers demonstrate that the DMN integrates personal identity with social context over extended timescales. In professional environments where career identity is heavily peer-referenced — where your sense of self is continuously calibrated against colleagues, competitors, and industry norms — the DMN incorporates that social mirror into its identity architecture. A professional whose self-concept has been heavily shaped by their industry's expectations may be unable to access a genuine individual self-concept independent of that social scaffolding. Standard assessments administered within this context simply recapitulate the socially constructed identity rather than revealing the authentic one beneath it.
A third line of research identifies a two-stage neural architecture for future planning that illuminates why many professionals can identify career options but feel no motivational pull toward any of them. When individuals simulate the steps toward a career goal, the DMN couples with the frontoparietal control network — the brain's executive planning system. When they simulate the emotional experience of achieving that goal, the DMN couples with reward-processing regions including the amygdala and nucleus accumbens. Both forms of coupling are required for a career direction to feel both actionable and compelling. When DMN-frontoparietal coupling is impaired, you can know who you are but cannot translate that knowledge into a coherent plan. When DMN-reward coupling is impaired, you can identify a technically good fit but feel nothing toward it. Both produce the characteristic experience of career limbo.
How Dr. Ceruto Approaches Career Assessment
Dr. Ceruto's methodology begins where conventional assessment ends. Rather than measuring behavioral outputs and calling them identity, Real-Time Neuroplasticity addresses the neural systems generating those outputs — the DMN self-referential architecture, the hippocampal future-self simulation capacity, and the coupling pathways that connect self-knowledge to both strategic planning and motivational engagement.
The pattern that presents most often is a professional whose DMN narrative has been shaped by years of industry-specific reinforcement. Their self-concept is not wrong — it is incomplete. The assessment process maps where the authentic signal lives beneath the adapted identity, identifies where DMN coherence has been disrupted by environmental change or chronic stress, and evaluates the functional coupling between self-referential systems and both executive planning and reward networks. This produces a neural career profile far more granular than any behavioral inventory — one that reveals not just what you tend to do but why certain directions feel alive while others feel hollow.
The intervention that follows is precisely targeted. Where DMN self-referential processing has been fragmented by identity threat or industry disruption, the work restores coherent access to an individuated self-concept. Where hippocampal future-self simulation is impoverished, the methodology facilitates richer, more detailed prospection — the brain's capacity to generate vivid, emotionally resonant images of possible professional futures. Where coupling between identity systems and planning or reward systems has weakened, the work rebuilds those connections so that career directions feel both achievable and genuinely compelling.
In over two decades of clinical neuroscience practice, the most reliable predictor of lasting career alignment is not what the assessment reveals but whether the neural infrastructure supporting self-knowledge is intact enough to use that information. That infrastructure is what this work addresses.
What to Expect
The engagement begins with a Strategy Call — a focused conversation where Dr. Ceruto evaluates whether neuroscience-based career assessment is the appropriate intervention for your specific situation. This is not a sales conversation. It is a precision decision about fit.
From there, the assessment unfolds within a structured advisory program. Unlike a single-session personality test, neural career assessment captures patterns that only emerge across time and context — the dynamic interplay between self-referential processing, future simulation, and motivational engagement that determines genuine career alignment. The process is designed to be thorough rather than fast, because the neural architecture encoding your professional identity was built over years and cannot be accurately mapped in an afternoon.
Throughout the engagement, Dr. Ceruto provides ongoing interpretation and structured intervention — not a report that sits in a drawer but an active process of neural recalibration that translates assessment findings into durable identity alignment. The result is not a list of career suggestions. It is a restructured relationship between who you are and what you do.

References
Grace Steward, Vivian Looi, Vikram S. Chib (2025). The Neurobiology of Cognitive Fatigue and Its Influence on Decision-Making. The Journal of Neuroscience. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1612-24.2025
Katharina Zühlsdorff, Jeffrey W. Dalley, Trevor W. Robbins, Sharon Morein-Zamir (2022). Cognitive Flexibility and Changing One's Mind: Neural Correlates. Cerebral Cortex. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhac431
Grace Steward, Vikram S. Chib (2024). The Neurobiology of Cognitive Fatigue and Its Influence on Effort-Based Decisions. Journal of Neuroscience. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.07.15.603598
Zhanna V. Chuikova, Andrei A. Filatov, Andrei Y. Faber, Marie Arsalidou (2024). Mapping Common and Distinct Brain Correlates of Cognitive Flexibility (Meta-Analysis). Brain Imaging and Behavior. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11682-024-00921-7