This is the Intelligent Sensing fork of axopy.
Documentation: https://axopy.readthedocs.io
Axo-Pythonic synapses are those in which an axon synapses upon a Python program. AxoPy aims to facilitate such connections between electrophysiolgical signals and machines by making it easy for researchers to develop human-computer interface experiments. If you've ever found yourself spending more time thinking about how to implement your experiments than thinking about what the experiment should be, AxoPy may be able to help.
AxoPy consists of:
- Graphical interface
- Central to AxoPy is the graphical user interface providing visual feedback to the subject and controlling the flow of the experiment. The GUI is backed by PyQt5, and you're free to implement customized graphical elements if those built in to AxoPy don't suit your needs.
- Data acquisition
- AxoPy establishes a fairly simple API for communicating with input hardware, so all that's usually needed is a bit of middleware to get going. Check out pytrigno or pymcc to see what this is like. A couple input devices are built in (keyboard, noise generator), so examples run without needing special hardware.
- Data storage
- Data is stored in a file structure with common file formats (CSV and HDF5) so you can a) start working with data as soon as an experiment session is over and b) you don't need anything but standard tools (pandas, h5py) to do so. A high-level interface to the storage structure is also provided to make traversing a dataset simple.
- Pipeline processing
- Estimating intentions of the user from raw electrophysiological signals often involves a large number of processing operations. AxoPy facilitates flexible construction of pipelines that can be reused in different parts of an experiment and re-used for offline post-processing, etc.
AxoPy is available on PyPI, so the following should get it installed if
you're using a standard Python installation with pip
:
$ pip install axopy
Note: if you have Python < 3.5, pip
will not be able to install the
pyqt5
package for you because wheels for pyqt5
are only provided for
Python >= 3.5. If you are stuck on an older version of Python, consider using
conda
(described below, works for any Python version) or installing Qt5 and
PyQt5 yourself before running the command above.
See the development documentation for information on setting up a development environment to work on AxoPy itself.
AxoPy is also available on conda-forge, so if you're using (Ana)conda with any Python version, you can install it with:
$ conda install -c conda-forge axopy
Here's a minimal example to display some randomly generated signals in an "oscilloscope":
import axopy
daq = axopy.daq.NoiseGenerator(rate=1000, num_channels=4, read_size=100)
exp = axopy.experiment.Experiment(daq=daq)
exp.run(axopy.task.Oscilloscope())
Check out the documentation for more information on creating experiments. Some examples are also available.
If you use AxoPy in your research and want to acknowledge us, see our instructions for citing AxoPy.
Please feel free to share any thoughts or opinions about the design and implementation of this software by opening an issue on GitHub. Constructive feedback is welcomed and appreciated.
GitHub issues also serve as the support channel, at least for now. Questions about how to do something are usually great opportunities to improve documentation, so you may be asked about your thoughts on where the answers should go.
If you want to contribute code, open a pull request. Bug fix pull requests are always welcome. For feature additions, breaking changes, etc. check if there is an open issue discussing the change and reference it in the pull request. If there isn't one, it is recommended to open one with your rationale for the change before spending significant time preparing the pull request.
Ideally, new/changed functionality should come with tests and documentation. If you are new to contributing, it is perfectly fine to open a work-in-progress pull request and have it iteratively reviewed. See the development documentation for instructions on setting up a development environment, running tests, and building the documentation.