Tutorial 9: Select files and run processes

Authors: Francois Tadel, Elizabeth Bock, Sylvain Baillet

The Brainstorm window includes a graphical batching interface. With the two tabs Process1 and Process2 in the lower part of the window, you can select files from the database explorer and assemble a processing pipeline. Most of the operations available in the interface can also be executed this way, including everything we've been doing with Brainstorm so far.

On the other hand, some features are only available this way. It is the case for the frequency filters we will need for the pre-processing of our auditory recordings. This tutorial is a parenthesis to explain how to select files and run processes, we will resume with the cleaning of the recordings in the next tutorial.

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Selecting files to process

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The tab Process1 contains a empty box in which you can drag and drop any number of files or folders from the database explorer. The easier way to understand how it works is to try it.

Filter by name or comment

When you have lots of files in a folder, like multiple source reconstructions or time-frequency files for each trial, it is difficult to grab just the ones you are interested in. After selecting your folders in the Process1 box, you can refine the selection with the Filter search box at the bottom-right corner of the window.

The options offered in the Filter menu are:

Selecting processes

Plugin structure

All the menus available in the pipeline editor are actually plugins for Brainstorm. The processes are functions that are independent from each other and detected automatically when starting Brainstorm.

Any Matlab script that is added to the plugin folder (brainstorm3/toolbox/process/functions/) and has the right format will be automatically detected and made available in the GUI. This mechanism makes it easy for external contributors to develop their own code an integrate it in the interface.

More information: How to write your own process

Too much information

Everything below is advanced documentation. It might be confusing for beginners, you can skip it for now.




Saving a pipeline

After preparing your analysis pipeline by listing all the operations to run on your input files, you can either click on the [Run] button, or save/export your pipeline. The last button in the the toolbar offers a list of menus to save, load and export the pipelines.

Automatic script generation

Here is the Matlab script that is generated automatically for this pipeline.

pipeline_script.gif

Reading this script is easy: input files at the top, one block per process, one line per option. You can also modify them to add personal code, loops or tests. Many features are still missing in the pipeline editor, but the generated scripts are easy enough for users with basic Matlab knowledge to edit and improve them.

Running this script from Matlab or clicking on the [Run] button of the pipeline editor produce exactly the same results. In both cases you will not have any interaction with the script, it could be executed without any direct supervision. You just get a report in the end that describes everything that happened during the execution.

Those scripts cannot be reloaded in the pipeline editor window after being generated. If you work on a long analysis pipeline, save it in your user preferences before generating the corresponding Matlab script.

Process: Select files with tag

Since we are discussing the file selection and the pipeline execution, we can explore a few more available options. We have seen how to filter the files in the Process1 box using the Filter search box. We can get to the exact same result by using the process File > Select files: By tag before the process you want to execute, to keep only a subset of the files that were placed in the Process1 list.

It is less convenient in interactive mode because you don't see immediately the effect of your file filter, but it can be very useful when writing scripts. You can also combine search constraints by adding multiple times the same process in your pipeline, which is not possible with the search box.

Report viewer

Everytime the pipeline editor is used to run a list of processes, a report is created and logs all the messages that are generated during the execution. These reports are saved in the user home folder: $HOME/.brainstorm/reports/.

The report viewer shows as an HTML page some of the information saved in this report structure: the date and duration of execution, the list of processes, the input and output files. It reports all the warnings and errors that occurred during the execution.

The report is displayed at the end of the execution only if there were more than one process executed, or if an error or a warning was reported. In this case, nothing is displayed.

You can always open explicitly the report viewer to show the last reports: File > Report viewer.

reports.gif

When running processes manually from a script, the calls to bst_report explicitly indicate when the logging of the events should start and stop.

You can add images to the reports for quality control using the process File > Save snapshot.

With the buttons in the toolbar, you can go back to the previous reports saved from the same protocol.

More information: Complete tutorial script

Error management

Control the output file names

If you are running two processes with different parameters but that produce exactly the same file names and file comments, you wouldn't be able to select them with this process. But immediately after calling any process, you can add the process File > Add tag to tag one specific set of files, so that you can re-select them easily later.

Example: You run twice the time-frequency decomposition with different options on the same files, tag the files after calculating them with different tags.

addTag.gif

Additional documentation

Tutorial: Complete tutorial script

Tutorial: How to write your own process








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Tutorials/PipelineEditor (last edited 2015-03-02 23:48:48 by FrancoisTadel)