IN THIS COLUMN
- Jingwen Zhang, Department of Communication
- Kevin R. Johnson, School of Law
- Gabriel “Jack” Chin, School of Law
- William S. Dodge, School of Law
- Robert Bayley, Department of Linguistics
- Tamara Swaab, Department of Psychology and Center for Mind and Brain
- 51Թϱ and 282 Gilman Scholars
The American Public Health Association, or APHA, recently presented Jingwen Zhang, assistant professor of communication, with its Ayman El-Mohandes Young Professional Public Health Innovation Award for 2021.
El-Mohandes, a pediatrician, epidemiologist and dean of the Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy at City University of New York, established the award in 2019 to recognize colleagues up to 40 years old who are using innovative solutions to address complex public health issues.
The APHA honored Zhang for her research on communication and emerging media technologies that promote healthy lifestyles and preventive behaviors across diverse populations.
Her work includes social media-based interventions and the development of mobile app technologies and artificial intelligence chatbots designed to increase physical activity, contraceptive use and cancer prevention in underserved groups.
Yoshimi Fukuoka, a professor of physiological nursing at UC San Francisco, said in her nomination: “Dr. Zhang has made extensive research contributions to advancing persuasive technology and electronic and mobile health, especially for the purpose of improving lifestyle modification programs to reduce the public health burden of noncommunicable diseases.”
Zhang has published more than 40 scholarly articles in leading journals. Her work has been supported by the National Cancer Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Read more about Zhang’s research:
—&Բ;Kathleen Holder, content strategist, College of Letters and Science

In recent rankings of 51Թϱ law professors’ scholarly impact, Dean Kevin R. Johnson is cited as the most-cited immigration law scholar in the United States.
Leiter’s rankings show scholarly impact by individual faculty members in different fields of the law. His immigration law rankings, besides No. 1 Johnson, include 51Թϱ Professor Gabriel “Jack” Chin as a “highly cited” scholar who work partly in this area. Johnson and Chin also are listed as who work partly in critical theories of law.
In September, Leiter ranked Professor William S. Dodge No. 15 among most-cited and recognized Chin among who work partly in criminal law and procedure.

The Linguistics Society of America recently presented its Linguistics, Language and the Public Award to 51Թϱ’ Robert Bayley and three colleagues for their research on Black American Sign Language.
The recipients: Bayley, a professor of linguistics; Joseph Hill, an associate professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology’s National Technical Institute for the Deaf; and Carolyn McCaskill and Ceil Lucas, both professors at Gallaudet University.
They conducted a six-year study of Black American Sign Language that resulted in the book (Gallaudet University Press, 2011). It came out in paperback in May 2020.
A recent documentary, , highlights their research. Their findings were also cited in a January 2021 article in The New York Times on the growing visibility of Black Deaf signers.
In studying the language of about 100 Black Deaf signers in six Southern states, Bayley and colleagues found that Black ASL is more aligned with early American Sign Language than the white counterpart. They attribute that difference to segregation and a longtime emphasis in white deaf schools on oralism — teaching deaf students to speak and lip-read more than sign.
“The work effectively increases public awareness of language use in African American communities, and it inspires communities to work to continue to celebrate and maintain BASL,” according to the on the LSA website. “That work inspires movement from awareness to action — the kind of impact linguistics should have in communities all over the world! In a word, it is an excellent example of work by linguists that informs the public.”
—&Բ;Kathleen Holder, content strategist, College of Letters and Science

Tamara Swaab, a professor in the Department of Psychology and at the Center for