Peter Suedfeld was born in Budapest, Hungary to
Jewish parents who died in the concentration camp at
Auschwitz. The young Suedfeld escaped with the help of the
International Red Cross and immigrated to the United States after World War II. After three years of service in the
United States Army, he received his BA from
Queens College of the City University of New York in 1960, and his MA and PhD in
experimental psychology from
Princeton University in 1963. He taught at the
University of Illinois and
Rutgers University prior to joining the
University of British Columbia in 1972 as head of the Department of Psychology. He later became Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies, and now holds emeritus status. Suedfeld is a Fellow of the
Royal Society of Canada (the National Academy), the
Canadian Psychological Association, the
American Psychological Association (6 Divisions), and the Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research. He is a full member of the
International Academy of Astronautics, a Fellow International of the
Explorers Club, and the only psychologist elected as an Honorary Fellow of the
Royal Canadian Geographical Society. He has received the Canadian Psychological Society's
Donald O. Hebb Award, its highest award for distinguished scientific contributions, as well as the Society's gold medal for distinguished and enduring lifetime contributions to Canadian psychology and its Award for Distinguished Contributions to the International Advancement of Psychology. Other awards include the
Canadian Polar Medal,
Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee Medal, the highest award for scientific contributions from the
International Society of Political Psychology, the
Antarctica Service Medal of the U.S.
National Science Foundation, and the Zachor Award of the
Parliament of Canada for contributions by Holocaust survivors to Canadian society. He has chaired the Canadian Antarctic Research Program and the Life Sciences Advisory Committee of the
Canadian Space Agency. ==Research==