CSUF Faculty Are Among Top 2% of Cited Authors in the World fullerton.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fullerton.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
April 27, 2021 Share This:
Cal State Fullerton faculty and staff were awarded close to $3.8 million in funding during the period January to March 2021. Supported projects explore such topics as immigration status and crime, vaping among young adults in Orange County and cultivating diverse teacher leaders in California.
Stephanie Vaughn, professor emeritus of nursing and project director of EMBRACE: $494,061 from Health Resources and Services Administration for the “EMBRACE: Enrichment Markers of Better Relationships, Academics and Cultural Enhancement” project
Lidia Nuño, assistant professor of criminal justice: $462,165 from the U.S. Department of Justice for the project titled “Assessing the Relationship Between Immigration Status, Crime, Gang Affiliation and Victimization”
Titans Recognized as Top-Cited Scientists
13 Cal State Fullerton faculty members top the Stanford study list of 100,000 cited researchers worldwide Dec. 18, 2020 Share This:
More than a dozen Cal State Fullerton faculty members are among the top 2% well-cited scientists, according to a study conducted by Stanford University.
Three CSUF psychology faculty and former faculty members Professor Nancy L. Segal and emeriti professors Richard A. Lippa and Michael H. Birnbaum made the list, along with faculty members in information systems and decision sciences, human communications, chemistry, biological science, kinesiology and finance.
Focusing on several indicators, the study analyzed data from 1996 through 2019, covering 7 million scientists in 22 major fields ranking from chemistry to engineering to economics and business.