The Zeigarnik effect helps explain why unfinished goals can feel louder than completed ones, but modern research suggests the mind’s pull toward open loops is far more conditional than the famous story implies
· space daily editorial team
Source Summary
Bluma Zeigarnik's 1927 Berlin experiments showed the mind clings to unfinished tasks about twice as tightly as completed ones — the finding that explains cliffhangers, to-do lists, and why a hard-won goal rarely stays satisfying for long. The post The Zeigarnik effect helps explain why unfinished goals can feel louder than completed ones, but modern research suggests the mind’s pull toward open loops is far more conditional than the famous story implies appeared first on Space Daily .
Advertisement