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Fishere, Mariam; Habermas, Tilmann – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Individuals narrate stories to explain how they became who they are, forming their own narrative identity. Highly disruptive experiences such as child maltreatment (CM) may be challenging to integrate into the life story and even to narrate coherently just by themselves. To test these potential effects, we divided a total of 171 students at an…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Young Adults, Personal Narratives, Self Concept
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Habermas, Tilmann; Hatiboglu, Nese – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2014
In adolescence, remembering the personal past and understanding what kind of person one is intertwine to form a story of one's life as the most extant, informative, and flexible form of self-representation. In adolescence, the striving for self-coherence translates into a quest for global coherence of the life story. We suggest that…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Personal Narratives, Self Concept, Migrants
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Köber, Christin; Habermas, Tilmann – Discourse Processes: A multidisciplinary journal, 2017
In Western cultures, life narratives are typically expected to recount the narrator's life from birth to the present. Disparate autobiographical memories need to be integrated into a more or less coherent story, which is facilitated by an overarching temporal macrostructure. The temporal macrostructure consists of elaborated beginnings that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Personal Narratives, Autobiographies, Time
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Köber, Christin; Schmiedek, Florian; Habermas, Tilmann – Developmental Psychology, 2015
The ability to narrate stories and a synchronic self-concept develop in the pre- and primary school years. Life story theory proposes that both developments extend to an even later developmental stage, that is, to adolescents' acquisition of a coherent life story. Cross-sectional evidence supports the emergence of a life story in adolescence, but…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Individual Development, Age Differences, Longitudinal Studies
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Habermas, Tilmann – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2011
Autobiographical reasoning is the activity of creating relations between different parts of one's past, present, and future life and one's personality and development. It embeds personal memories in a culturally, temporally, causally, and thematically coherent life story. Prototypical autobiographical arguments are presented. Culture and…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Reflection, Thinking Skills, Time Perspective
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Habermas, Tilmann; Negele, Alexa; Mayer, Fernanda Brenneisen – Cognitive Development, 2010
Research on mother-child reminiscing as a socializing practice for autobiographical memory is extended from early childhood and the narrating of single events to adolescence and the narrating of an entire life story. To explore whether the development of the life story in adolescence depends on qualities of the narrator or on the brevity of the…
Descriptors: Mothers, Adolescents, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Parent Child Relationship
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Habermas, Tilmann; de Silveira, Cybele – Developmental Psychology, 2008
Extending the study of autobiographical narratives to entire life narratives, we tested the emergence of globally coherent life narratives in adolescence, as hypothesized by McAdams (1985). Participants were 102 children and young adults (ages 8, 12, 16, and 20 years) who narrated their lives twice. Between narrations, half of each age group…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Rhetoric, Young Adults, Personal Narratives
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Habermas, Tilmann – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2007
Extending research on age norms in adults, the development of the knowledge of two components of the cultural concept of biography, biographical salience of and age norms for life events was studied from late childhood to early adulthood in Study 1 and across adulthood in Study 2. The largest increase in knowledge was found between ages 8 and 12,…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Personal Narratives, Late Adolescents, Young Adults