After Ovsiankina completed graduate school, she held psychology jobs in Germany for several years. She worked as a researcher, a teaching assistant, a counselor and in a prison. All of those jobs left her feeling unfulfilled and she moved to the United States in 1938, where she met Dembo again and also met European psychologist
Eugenia Hanfmann, who was also a student of Lewin. The three of them worked together at the
Worcester State Hospital in Massachusetts, which is where Ovsiankina started working with patients who had
schizophrenia and she considered many of them to be her close friends. In 1935, she began working at
Wheaton College as a psychology professor for 14 years. In 1949, she developed and directed the clinical training program at the
University of Connecticut. Ovsiankina was interested in psychological testing, including the
Rorschach test, and she wrote books on those tests. She also taught at
Mount Holyoke College, the
University of Oregon,
Cornell University,
Harvard University, and Northeastern Universities. During the test, Ovsiankina gave subjects tasks to complete and left them alone in a room to study them while the participants started working on the task again. Her approach to the prior effect study showed "that it was not the interruption of the action per se that is responsible for the Zeigarnik effect. The determining factor is the psychological situation as it is perceived by the individual; i.e., whether the goal (e.g., solving a task correctly) is perceived as having been accomplished or not". The Ovsiankina effect also "showed that interrupted tasks are almost always resumed". ==Later life and death==