Anxiety Trajectories and Identity Development in Adolescence: A Five-wave Longitudinal Study

Publication date

2009-07

Authors

Crocetti, ElisabettaISNI 0000000505985379
Klimstra, Theo A.ISNI 0000000394368844
Keijsers, LoesISNI 0000000389315975
Hale, WilliamISNI 0000000396593746
Meeus, WimISNI 0000000034127027

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Article
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Abstract

The aim of this five-wave longitudinal study was to investigate the relationship between anxiety and adolescent identity development. Participants were 1,313 adolescents who annually completed measures of anxiety and identity. Growth Mixture Modeling (GMM) analyses demonstrated that the adolescent population was best typified by two latent growth trajectory classes: a low anxiety class (n = 1,199) characterized by a low initial level of anxiety that decreased over time and a high anxiety class (n = 114) characterized by a higher initial level of anxiety that increased over time. To answer our research question, we tested a model in which the anxiety classes predicted initial levels and rates of change of three identity dimensions: commitment, in-depth exploration, and reconsideration of commitment. Findings indicated that the high anxiety adolescents displayed a more troublesome identity development than their low anxiety peers, since their commitments became weaker with age, and they reconsidered them intensively.

Keywords

Adolescents, Anxiety, Identity, Trajectory classes, Longitudinal, PERSONALITY TYPE, PROBLEM BEHAVIOR, DISORDERS, SCREEN, CONSTRUCTION, PERSPECTIVE, VALIDATION, ADULTHOOD, DYNAMICS, MIXTURE, Taverne

Citation

Crocetti, E, Klimstra, T, Keijsers, L, Hale, W W & Meeus, W 2009, 'Anxiety Trajectories and Identity Development in Adolescence : A Five-wave Longitudinal Study', Journal of Youth and Adolescence, vol. 38, no. 6, pp. 839-849. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10964-008-9302-y