Leda Lunardi is Professor at the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at North Carolina State University in Raleigh. Presently she is the vice-chair for the 2019 IEEE Fellow Committee, and member of the 2020 IEEE Cledo Brunetti Award and 2020 IEEE Jun-ichi Nishizawa Medal committees. ​​​​​​​


What is the best advice you have ever received?  

During my second maternity “leave” (after triplets, having already a toddler at home) and reconsidering my career, I received a note from my laboratory director acknowledging the issue of one of my patents, which said: "Congratulations, come back we need your brain!" I guess this was the best advice I ever received as I went back full time in one of the best jobs of my career for the following four years till the company (AT&T) split and the rest is history.


What is one change that, in your opinion, would hugely benefit aspiring women scientists?

One change would be to have a woman with a STEM degree elected as U.S. president. That would be a great benefit for all aspiring women scientists. 51% of the U.S. population are women and that would make a considerable difference. The last U.S. president to have a STEM degree was Jimmy Carter.


What is the biggest challenge you face as a woman in STEM?

Biggest challenge as a woman is lack of recognition for the work we do and it comes in several ways as I have seen in the last three decades working. If a woman is doing it the job must be easy. Broadly the public associates a typical image of an engineer with a man not a woman. 


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Leda Lunardi

Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, North Carolina State University in Raleigh