Image credits
Credits and licensing for the images used across this site. Charts and figures generated from code are not listed here; they are produced by the site’s own tooling from sources in the repository.
Photography
Photographs by Michael E. DeWitt unless noted otherwise:
- Field outbreak-response training in PPE (Peru)
- House-to-house disease surveillance with the EMERGE field team (Peru)
- Field laboratory microscopy
- Rice-field sample collection
- Bat mist-net reservoir sampling
- Parasite microscopy during laboratory diagnostics
- Scanwell at-home SARS-CoV-2 serologic (antibody) test kit
- Pacific coast and beach at Tumbes, Peru
- Faculty and instructor portraits (Michael E. DeWitt, John W. Sanders)
Other photography:
- Students at a disease-modeling whiteboard — courtesy of Epistorm.
Historical images (public domain)
- Masthead of a 1913 issue of Public Health Reports (“Malaria in North Carolina,” Henry R. Carter, U.S. Public Health Service).
- Early-twentieth-century anti-vaccination cartoon depicting “misinformation.”
Illustrations
Scientific illustrations are from the NIH BioArt Source (NIAID) and are in the public domain, courtesy of NIAID. Individual illustrations were created by NIAID staff (e.g., Ryan Kissinger). These include the depictions of viruses and antibodies, laboratory instruments (qPCR machine, liquid-chromatography instrument), a blood smear, a Western blot, a microplate, a syringe, and a tick.
Logos and brand assets
Wake Forest University and Wake Forest University School of Medicine marks are used in connection with the program’s affiliation and remain the property of their respective owners.