Dr. Yang is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication. Her research examines the intersection of health communication, strategic communication, and new media from a social scientific perspective. The primary topics of her research include how message features and audience characteristics influence health persuasion outcomes, social norms formation and impact on health-related behavior, and health-related media use, processes and effects. She examines these topics in the context of substance abuse, specifically alcohol and tobacco. Her recent work was supported by the National Cancer Institute, National Institute on Drug Abuse and U.S. Food and Drug Administration FDA) focusing on understanding how to effectively communicate to the public and vulnerable population about nicotine and novel tobacco products that may present less risks than conventional cigarettes modified risk tobacco products) Specific projects include testing messages communicating the relative risk of electronic cigarettes e-cigarettes) compared to combusted cigarettes, examining communication about nicotine, and exploring the impact of nicotine warning label on comparative risk communication about e-cigarettes. Also, she examines decision making around novel tobacco products among general and vulnerable population in the U.S. and the role of emotions in the decision-making process and individuals' processing of tobacco education messages. Dr. Yang has been actively working with people across a range of disciplinary areas and has published in major communication and public health journals, such as Health Communication, Journal of Health Communication, American Journal of Public Health, Tobacco Control, and Health Education and Behavior. Dr. Yang completed her PhD in Communication at the University of Maryland and her MA in Strategic Public Relations at the University of Southern California. Prior to joining the faculty at University of Arizona, she is a postdoctoral research associate at the National Institutes of Health and FDA jointly funded Tobacco Center of Regulatory Science in the School of Public Health at Georgia State University, where she was leading research on tobacco risk communication to inform tobacco education and regulation in the U.S.