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Title: The development of narrative identity in late adolescence and emergent adulthood: the continued importance of listeners. Author: Pasupathi M, Hoyt T. Journal: Dev Psychol; 2009 Mar; 45(2):558-74. PubMed ID: 19271839. Abstract: Research on narrative identity in late adolescence and early adulthood has not extensively examined how conversational storytelling affects the development of narrative identity. This is a major gap, given the importance of this age period for narrative identity development and the clear importance of parent-child conversations in the development of narrative identity. The authors present a series of 3 studies (n = 220) examining how late adolescents and early adults construct narrative identity in ways that are shaped by their listeners. The findings suggest that late adolescents and early adults construct more meaning-laden, interpretive accounts of their everyday experiences when they converse with responsive friends. Further, even within this sample's abbreviated age range, the authors found evidence for age-related increases in the factual content of personal memories. Such findings illuminate the importance of friends in the construction of narrative identity during this key developmental period.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]