Preregistration

Unfinished Tasks and Rumination: A Replication Study on the Mediating Role of Competence Need Satisfaction and the Moderating Effects of Proactive Work Behavior and Leisure Crafting

Author(s) / Creator(s)

Heise, Julia
Weigelt, Oliver

Abstract / Description

Work-related rumination (WRR) defines a state of perseverative cognitive activation in which work continues to occupy the employee's mind during off-job hours (Querstret & Cropley, 2012). Research distinguishes between three components: problem pondering, detachment, and affective rumination. Among these, only affective rumination has a negative valence, while problem pondering is positive and detachment is neutral. A growing body of literature indicates that unfinished tasks link most strongly to affective rumination (Wendsche et al., 2026), with recent research suggesting that competence need satisfaction mediates the relationship and proactive work behavior moderates it (Weigelt et al., 2019). To extend prior work, this study will examine leisure crafting, contributing to the understanding of potential moderators under which the relationship between unfinished tasks and affective rumination holds, thereby providing opportunities for intervention research.

Keyword(s)

Work-related rumination basic need satisfaction taking charge leisure crafting incomplete goals goal discrepancy multilevel modeling multilevel CFA

Persistent Identifier

PsychArchives acquisition timestamp

2026-05-15 10:27:20 UTC

Publisher

PsychArchives

Citation

  • MSc_RUG_PRP_QUANT_V2-4.pdf
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    MD5 : fe3b212ac162461179d95e2922660518
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    Description: Preregistration for the Master's Thesis in Work, Organizational, and Personnel Psychology at the University of Groningen.
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Heise, Julia
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Weigelt, Oliver
  • PsychArchives acquisition timestamp
    2026-05-15T10:27:20Z
  • Made available on
    2026-05-15T10:27:20Z
  • Date of first publication
    2026-05-15
  • Abstract / Description
    Work-related rumination (WRR) defines a state of perseverative cognitive activation in which work continues to occupy the employee's mind during off-job hours (Querstret & Cropley, 2012). Research distinguishes between three components: problem pondering, detachment, and affective rumination. Among these, only affective rumination has a negative valence, while problem pondering is positive and detachment is neutral. A growing body of literature indicates that unfinished tasks link most strongly to affective rumination (Wendsche et al., 2026), with recent research suggesting that competence need satisfaction mediates the relationship and proactive work behavior moderates it (Weigelt et al., 2019). To extend prior work, this study will examine leisure crafting, contributing to the understanding of potential moderators under which the relationship between unfinished tasks and affective rumination holds, thereby providing opportunities for intervention research.
    en
  • Publication status
    other
  • Review status
    unknown
  • Persistent Identifier
    https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/17487
  • Persistent Identifier
    https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.22126
  • Language of content
    eng
  • Publisher
    PsychArchives
  • Keyword(s)
    Work-related rumination
  • Keyword(s)
    basic need satisfaction
  • Keyword(s)
    taking charge
  • Keyword(s)
    leisure crafting
  • Keyword(s)
    incomplete goals
  • Keyword(s)
    goal discrepancy
  • Keyword(s)
    multilevel modeling
  • Keyword(s)
    multilevel CFA
  • Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)
    150
  • Title
    Unfinished Tasks and Rumination: A Replication Study on the Mediating Role of Competence Need Satisfaction and the Moderating Effects of Proactive Work Behavior and Leisure Crafting
    en
  • DRO type
    preregistration
  • Visible tag(s)
    PRP-QUANT