17739
Comment:
|
18334
|
Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
Line 4: | Line 4: |
<<HTML(<!-- div style="margin-top: -10px; padding: 0px; border: 0px solid #999; float: right; clear: right;"><A href="http://neuroimage.usc.edu/brainstorm/Jobs">)>> {{attachment:hiring.jpg||width="115",height="77"}} <<HTML(</A></div -->)>> | <<HTML(<!-- div style="margin-top: -10px; padding: 0px; border: 0px solid #999; float: right; clear: right;"><A href="http://neuroimage.usc.edu/brainstorm/Jobs">)>> {{attachment:hiring.jpg||height="77",width="115"}} <<HTML(</A></div -->)>> |
Line 16: | Line 16: |
<<HTML(<!-- * '''New courses''': Paris (December), Sydney (December) - [[Training|Register]] <<HTML(-->)>> |
<<HTML(<!--)>>New courses: Kentucky (Fall) - Register<<HTML(-->)>> * <<HTML(<FONT color="#DD0000">)>>'''Problems with automatic updates'''<<HTML(</FONT>)>>: [[https://github.com/brainstorm-tools/brainstorm3/issues/308#issuecomment-646026943|Read this page]] |
Line 28: | Line 25: |
Brainstorm is a collaborative, open-source application dedicated to the analysis of brain recordings: <<BR>>MEG, EEG, fNIRS, ECoG, depth electrodes and animal invasive neurophysiology. | Brainstorm is a collaborative, open-source application dedicated to the analysis of brain recordings: <<BR>>MEG, EEG, fNIRS, ECoG, depth electrodes and multiunit electrophysiology. |
Line 32: | Line 29: |
Since the project started by the end of the 1990's, our server has registered more than 24,000 accounts. See our [[Pub|reference page]] for a list of published studies featuring Brainstorm at work. | Since the project started by the end of the 1990's, our server has registered more than 27,000 accounts. See our [[Pub|reference page]] for a list of published studies featuring Brainstorm at work. |
Line 44: | Line 41: |
. ''' {{attachment:brainstorm_banner.gif||width="586px",height="209px"}} ''' | . ''' {{attachment:brainstorm_banner.gif||height="209px",width="586px"}} ''' |
Line 115: | Line 112: |
* EEG: Berg's three-layer sphere, Boundary Element Models (with [[Tutorials/TutBem|OpenMEEG]]) * sEEG/ECoG: Boundary Element Models (with OpenMEEG) |
* EEG: Berg's three-layer sphere, Boundary Element Models (with [[Tutorials/TutBem|OpenMEEG]]) and the Finite Element Models (with [[https://neuroimage.usc.edu/brainstorm/https://neuroimage.usc.edu/brainstorm/Tutorials/Duneuro|DUNEuro]]) * sEEG/ECoG: Boundary Element Models (with OpenMEEG) and the Finite Element Models (with [[https://neuroimage.usc.edu/brainstorm/https://neuroimage.usc.edu/brainstorm/Tutorials/Duneuro|DUNEuro]]) |
Line 178: | Line 177: |
* ANT EEProbe continuous (.cnt) | * ANT EEProbe (.cnt, .avr) |
Line 185: | Line 184: |
* CED Spike2 (.smr) | * CED Spike2 (.smr, .smrx, .son) |
Line 195: | Line 194: |
* EmotivPRO (.edf) | |
Line 209: | Line 209: |
* Open Ephys flat binary (*.dat) | |
Line 211: | Line 212: |
* The Virtual Brain (.h5) | |
Line 212: | Line 214: |
* Wearable Sensing (.csv) | |
Line 218: | Line 221: |
'''Surface atlases''' * BrainSuite (.dfs) * FreeSurfer (.annot, .label) * Gifti texture (.gii) * SUMA atlas (.dset) |
|
Line 233: | Line 243: |
'''fNIRS''' * Brainsight NIRS (.nirs) * SNIRF (.snirf) |
|
Line 235: | Line 250: |
* Brainsight NIRS (.nirs) | |
Line 250: | Line 264: |
* Localite (.csv) | |
Line 252: | Line 267: |
* SimNIBS (.csv) | |
Line 253: | Line 269: |
<<HTML(</TD></TR><TR><TD>)>> |
|
Line 267: | Line 281: |
'''Surface atlases''' * BrainSuite (.dfs) * FreeSurfer (.annot, .label) * Gifti texture (.gii) * SUMA atlas (.dset) <<HTML(</TD><TD>)>> |
|
Line 278: | Line 283: |
* ASCII (.tri) | |
Line 285: | Line 291: |
* ASCII (.tri) | |
Line 287: | Line 292: |
* SimNIBS/Gmsh (.msh) |
News
Problems with automatic updates: Read this page
Software updates: What's new | Follow us on Facebook and GitHub
Introduction
Brainstorm is a collaborative, open-source application dedicated to the analysis of brain recordings:
MEG, EEG, fNIRS, ECoG, depth electrodes and multiunit electrophysiology.
Our objective is to share a comprehensive set of user-friendly tools with the scientific community using MEG/EEG as an experimental technique. For physicians and researchers, the main advantage of Brainstorm is its rich and intuitive graphic interface, which does not require any programming knowledge. We are also putting the emphasis on practical aspects of data analysis (e.g., with scripting for batch analysis and intuitive design of analysis pipelines) to promote reproducibility and productivity in MEG/EEG research. Finally, although Brainstorm is developed with Matlab (and Java), it does not require users to own a Matlab license: an executable, platform-independent (Windows, MacOS, Linux) version is made available in the downloadable package. To get an overview of the interface, you can watch this introduction video.
Since the project started by the end of the 1990's, our server has registered more than 27,000 accounts. See our reference page for a list of published studies featuring Brainstorm at work.
The best way to learn how to use Brainstorm, like any other academic software, is to benefit from local experts. However, you may be the first one in your institution to consider using Brainstorm for your research. We are happy to provide comprehensive online tutorials and support through our forum but there is nothing better than a course to make your learning curve steeper. Consult our training pages for upcoming opportunities to learn better and faster.
Finally, have a look regularly at our What's new page for staying on top of Brainstorm news and updates and Like us on Facebook to stay in touch. We hope you enjoy using Brainstorm as much as we enjoy developing and sharing these tools with the community!
Support
This software was generated primarily with support from the National Institutes of Health under grants R01-EB026299, 2R01-EB009048, R01-EB009048, R01-EB002010 and R01-EB000473.
Primary support was provided by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS, France) for the Cognitive Neuroscience & Brain Imaging Laboratory (La Salpetriere Hospital and Pierre & Marie Curie University, Paris, France), and by the Montreal Neurological Institute to the MEG Program at McGill University.
Additional support was also from two grants from the French National Research Agency (ANR) to the Cognitive Neuroscience Unit (PI: Ghislaine Dehaene; Inserm/CEA, Neurospin, France) and to the ViMAGINE project (PI: Sylvain Baillet; ANR-08-BLAN-0250), and by the Epilepsy Center in the Cleveland Clinic Neurological Institute.
How to cite Brainstorm
Please cite the following reference in your publications if you have used our software for your data analyses: How to cite Brainstorm. It is also good offline reading to get an overview of the main features of the application.
Tadel F, Baillet S, Mosher JC, Pantazis D, Leahy RM (2011)
Brainstorm: A User-Friendly Application for MEG/EEG Analysis
Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience, vol. 2011, ID 879716
What you can do with Brainstorm
MEG/EEG recordings
Digitize the position of the EEG electrodes and the subject's head shape | link
Support for multiple modalities | MEG, EEG, sEEG, ECoG, NIRS, electrophysiology
Read data from the most popular file formats | link
Interactive access to data files in native formats | link
Import data in Matlab | link
Import and order data in a well-organized database | link
Review, edit and import event markers in continuous recordings | link
Automatic detection of well-defined artifacts: eye blinks, heartbeats | link
Artifact correction: Signal Space Projections (SSP)
Independent Component Analysis (ICA)
Detection of bad trials / bad channels
Baseline correction | link
Power spectrum density | link
Frequency filtering, resampling | link
Epoching | link
Averaging | link
Powerful and versatile visualization
Various time series displays | link
Data mapping on 2D or 3D surfaces | link
Generate slides and animations (export as contact sheets, snapshots, movies, ...)
Flexible montage editor | link
Channel selection and sensor clustering | link
MRI visualization and coregistration
Import individual MRI volumes and surfaces | link, FreeSurfer, BrainSuite, BrainVISA, CAT, CIVET
Deface MRI images | link
Normalize MRI to MNI space | link
Use anatomy templates | link
Warp templates to individual head surface | link
Automatic or interactive co-registration with the MEG/EEG coordinate system | link
Volume rendering (multiple display modes) | link
Anatomical atlases: surface parcelations and sub-cortical regions | link
Database: Keep your data organized
- Ordering of data by protocol, subject and condition/event
- Quick access to all the data in a study for efficient, batch processing
- Quick access to comparisons between subjects or conditions
Graphical batching tools
Apply the same process to many files in a few clicks | link
Automatic generation of scripts to perform full analysis | link
Flexible plug-in structure that makes the software easy to extend | link
Head modeling
MEG: Single sphere, overlapping spheres | link
EEG: Berg's three-layer sphere, Boundary Element Models (with OpenMEEG) and the Finite Element Models (with DUNEuro)
sEEG/ECoG: Boundary Element Models (with OpenMEEG) and the Finite Element Models (with DUNEuro)
- Interactive interface to define the best-fitting sphere
Source modeling
Estimation of noise statistics for improved source modeling | link
L2 Minimum-norm current estimates | link
Normalizations: dSPM, sLORETA, Z-score | link
- All models can be cortically-constrained or not, and with/without constrained orientations
Source estimation on cortical surface, MRI volume or sub-cortical atlases
Dipole scanning | link
Dipole fitting with FieldTrip | link
Import and display of Neuromag's Xfit and CTF's DipoleFit dipole models | link
Simulation of MEG/EEG recordings from source activity | link
Source display and analysis
Multiple options for surface and volume rendering of the source maps | link
- Re-projection of the sources in the MRI volume (from surface points to voxels)
Definition of regions of interest | link
Project the sources on a surface with higher or lower resolution | link
Project the sources on a group template | link
Surface or volume spatial smoothing | link
Time-frequency decompositions
Time-frequency analyses of sensor data and sources time series using Morlet wavelet, Fast Fourier Transform and Hilbert transform | link
- Define time and frequency scales of interest
- Multiple display modes available
Functional connectivity
Correlation, coherence, Granger causality, phase-locking value | link
Phase-amplitude coupling estimation | link
- Both at sensor and source levels
- Dynamic circle plots for representing dense and high-dimensional connectivity graphs
Representation of functional connectivity on anatomical fibers | link
Machine learning
Decoding / Multivariate pattern analysis with SVM or LDA | link
Group analysis
Registration of individual brains to a template | link
Parametric and non-parametric statistics | link
Standard group analysis pipeline | single subject, group, roadmaps
Guidelines for scripting the analysis of large datasets | link
Documentation and support
- Easy and automatic updates of the software
Detailed step-by-step tutorials for most common features
Active user forum supported by a large user community
Organization of training courses on demand
Supported file formats
EEG / Electrophysiology
Dipole models
Surface atlases
| MEG
fNIRS
Other recordings
Sensors locations
MRI volumes
Surface meshes
|