1 research outputs found
Daily Identity Dynamics in Adolescence Shaping Identity in Emerging Adulthood
According to identity theory, short-term day-to-day identity exploration and commitment processes are the building blocks
for long-term development of stable commitments in emerging adulthood. This key assumption was tested in a longitudinal
study including 494 individuals (43% girls, Mage T1 = 13.31 years, range 11.01–14.86 years) who were followed from
adolescence into emerging adulthood, covering ages 13 to 24 years. In the first five years, adolescents reported on their daily
identity processes (i.e., commitment, reconsideration and in-depth exploration) across 75 assessment days. Subsequently,
they reported on their identity across four (bi-) annual waves in emerging adulthood. Findings confirmed the existence of a
dual-cycle process model of identity formation and identity maintenance that operated at the within-person level across days
during adolescence. Moreover, individual differences in these short-term identity processes in adolescence predicted
individual differences in identity development in emerging adulthood. Specifically, those adolescents with low daily
commitment levels, and high levels of identity reconsideration were more likely to maintain weak identity commitments and
high identity uncertainty in emerging adulthood. Also, those adolescents characterized by stronger daily changes in identity
commitments and continuing day-to-day identity uncertainty maintained the highest identity uncertainty in emerging
adulthood. These results support the view of continuity in identity development from short-term daily identity dynamics in
adolescence to long-term identity development in emerging adulthood