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Ovsiankina Effect

A psychological phenomenon describing the innate human urge to finish previously initiated tasks. Named after Maria Ovsiankina, this effect explains why interrupted tasks create a 'quasi-need' that drives people to resume and complete unfinished work, making it a powerful tool for overcoming procrastination.

Last updated: 2026-03-15 12:55

Overview

The Ovsiankina effect describes the innate human urge to finish tasks previously initiated, with this tendency to resume an interrupted action being especially prevalent when the action hasn't yet been achieved. Named after psychologist Maria Ovsiankina who conducted research on this behavior in 1928.

How It Works

Ovsiankina found that individuals have a stronger urge to complete interrupted or unfinished assignments compared to tasks that haven't yet been started. An interrupted task creates a "quasi-need" that drives intrusive thoughts, compelling an individual to resume and possibly complete the task.

Relationship to Productivity

Overcoming Procrastination

Strategic Application

Connection to Zeigarnik Effect

Recent Research (2025)

A meta-analysis published in Nature found that while the Ovsiankina effect represents a general tendency to resume tasks, the Zeigarnik effect (memory advantage for unfinished tasks) lacks universal validity. This suggests the urge to complete tasks is more consistent than the memory advantage for them.

Practical Applications

For Productivity

  1. Start tasks you've been avoiding, even briefly
  2. Use the psychological pull to overcome initial resistance
  3. Create multiple open loops strategically to maintain momentum
  4. Allow natural breaks that trigger the resumption urge

Potential Drawbacks

Best Practices

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