I work where scattered observations become patterns, tracing signals across infectious disease epidemiology, surveillance, spatial analysis, and data systems marked by uncertainty.

My practice combines epidemiological analysis, data visualization, methodological critique, and exploratory scientific writing. I am drawn to models and maps that are transparent, interpretable, and attentive to the consequences of design, especially when data are incomplete, uneven, or difficult to reconcile.

This site gathers my work in public health, visualization, and science communication, with resonances from histories of measurement, classification, and the afterlives of scientific authority.