Dr. Amy Cuddy’s highly cited and award-winning research on stereotyping and prejudice, nonverbal behavior, and presence and performance under stress has been published in top academic journals, including the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Science, and Psychological Science, and featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Economist, Guardian, Wired, Fast Company, Inc., The Globe and Mail, NPR, BBC, and many more.
She was recently awarded the prestigious Scientific Impact Award by the Society for Experimental Social Psychology (2022), along with her long-time collaborators Susan Fiske and Peter Glick, for their paradigm-shifting theory of stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination. The award honors an article “offering a theoretical, empirical, and/or methodological contribution that has proven highly influential over the last 25 years.” Cuddy, Fiske, and Glick’s collection of studies and articles on stereotypes of warmth and competence has been cited more than 20,000 times and has shaped how researchers and practitioners conceptualize, study, and address intergroup biases.
She has been a guest on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert, The Today Show, Good Morning America, CBS This Morning, CBS Sunday Morning, BBC World News, Morning Joe, 60 Minutes with Charlie Rose, CNN with Anderson Cooper, among others. Cuddy has written for The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Harvard Business Review, and CNN.