“…It also reflects variable elements that include, for example, the individual's developmental period (coherence increased in this study over time in a group of emergent adults and the increase was not dependent on repetition of the same event, see also literature on cognitive maturation: Bohn & Berntsen, 2008;Köber et al, 2015;Reese et al, 2011), the event-processing time (coherence was higher for events that were concluded compared to ongoing events, see also Fivush et al, 2017;Waters et al, 2019), particular event characteristics (valence: coherence is often higher for narratives about negative events, see also: Vanderveren et al, 2019;event type: Banks & Salmon, 2013), and specific characteristics of the social context (listener's behaviour, social reinforcement: Bavelas et al, 2000;Pasupathi, 2001;Pasupathi & Rich, 2005). Summarised, this study provides support for the idea that there is a combination of an intra-individual stability as well as variability component to coherence, rather than coherence being either a characteristic of only the specific event or only the individual (Adler et al, 2018;Fivush et al, 2017;McLean et al, 2017;Pasupathi et al, 2020;Waters et al, 2019).…”