The Python Toolbox for Neurophysiological Signal Processing.


Keywords
NeuroKit2, physiology, bodily, signals, Python, ECG, EDA, EMG, PPG, biosignals, cardiac, eeg, entropy, eog, hacktoberfest, heart-rate, hrv, scr, signal, signal-processing, skin-conductance, software, tutorial
License
MIT
Install
pip install neurokit2==0.2.7

Documentation

https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/img/banner.png https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/neurokit2.svg?logo=python&logoColor=FFE873 https://img.shields.io/pypi/dm/neurokit2 https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/neurokit2.svg?logo=pypi&logoColor=FFE873 Maintainability

The Python Toolbox for Neurophysiological Signal Processing

NeuroKit2 is a user-friendly package providing easy access to advanced biosignal processing routines. Researchers and clinicians without extensive knowledge of programming or biomedical signal processing can analyze physiological data with only two lines of code.

Quick Example

import neurokit2 as nk

# Download example data
data = nk.data("bio_eventrelated_100hz")

# Preprocess the data (filter, find peaks, etc.)
processed_data, info = nk.bio_process(ecg=data["ECG"], rsp=data["RSP"], eda=data["EDA"], sampling_rate=100)

# Compute relevant features
results = nk.bio_analyze(processed_data, sampling_rate=100)

And boom 💥 your analysis is done 😎

Download

You can download NeuroKit2 from PyPI

pip install neurokit2

or conda-forge

conda install -c conda-forge neurokit2

If you're not sure what to do, read our installation guide.

Contributing

License GitHub CI Black code

NeuroKit2 is the most welcoming project with a large community of contributors with all levels of programming expertise. But the package is still far from being perfect! Thus, if you have some ideas for improvement, new features, or just want to learn Python and do something useful at the same time, do not hesitate and check out the following guide:

Also, if you have developed new signal processing methods or algorithms and you want to increase their usage, popularity, and citations, get in touch with us to eventually add them to NeuroKit. A great opportunity for the users as well as the original developers!

You have spotted a mistake? An error in a formula or code? OR there is just a step that seems strange and you don't understand? Please let us know! We are human beings, and we'll appreciate any inquiry.

Documentation

Documentation Status API Tutorials

Click on the links above and check out our tutorials:

General

Examples

Don't know which tutorial is suited for your case? Follow this flowchart:

https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/workflow.png

Citation

https://img.shields.io/badge/details-authors-purple.svg?colorB=9C27B0

The NeuroKit2 paper can be found here 🎉 Additionally, you can get the reference directly from Python by running:

nk.cite()
You can cite NeuroKit2 as follows:

- Makowski, D., Pham, T., Lau, Z. J., Brammer, J. C., Lespinasse, F., Pham, H.,
Schölzel, C., & Chen, S. A. (2021). NeuroKit2: A Python toolbox for neurophysiological signal processing.
Behavior Research Methods, 53(4), 1689–1696. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13428-020-01516-y

Full bibtex reference:

@article{Makowski2021neurokit,
    author = {Dominique Makowski and Tam Pham and Zen J. Lau and Jan C. Brammer and Fran{\c{c}}ois Lespinasse and Hung Pham and Christopher Schölzel and S. H. Annabel Chen},
    title = {{NeuroKit}2: A Python toolbox for neurophysiological signal processing},
    journal = {Behavior Research Methods},
    volume = {53},
    number = {4},
    pages = {1689--1696},
    publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media {LLC}},
    doi = {10.3758/s13428-020-01516-y},
    url = {https://doi.org/10.3758%2Fs13428-020-01516-y},
    year = 2021,
    month = {feb}
}

Let us know if you used NeuroKit2 in a publication! Open a new discussion (select the NK in publications category) and link the paper. The community would be happy to know about how you used it and learn about your research. We could also feature it once we have a section on the website for papers that used the software.

Physiological Data Preprocessing

Simulate physiological signals

You can easily simulate artificial ECG (also 12-Lead multichannel ECGs), PPG, RSP, EDA, and EMG signals to test your scripts and algorithms.

import numpy as np
import pandas as pd
import neurokit2 as nk

# Generate synthetic signals
ecg = nk.ecg_simulate(duration=10, heart_rate=70)
ppg = nk.ppg_simulate(duration=10, heart_rate=70)
rsp = nk.rsp_simulate(duration=10, respiratory_rate=15)
eda = nk.eda_simulate(duration=10, scr_number=3)
emg = nk.emg_simulate(duration=10, burst_number=2)

# Visualise biosignals
data = pd.DataFrame({"ECG": ecg,
                     "PPG": ppg,
                     "RSP": rsp,
                     "EDA": eda,
                     "EMG": emg})
nk.signal_plot(data, subplots=True)
https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_simulation.png

Electrodermal Activity (EDA/GSR)

# Generate 10 seconds of EDA signal (recorded at 250 samples / second) with 2 SCR peaks
eda = nk.eda_simulate(duration=10, sampling_rate=250, scr_number=2, drift=0.01)

# Process it
signals, info = nk.eda_process(eda, sampling_rate=250)

# Visualise the processing
nk.eda_plot(signals, info)
https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_eda.png

Cardiac activity (ECG)

# Generate 15 seconds of ECG signal (recorded at 250 samples/second)
ecg = nk.ecg_simulate(duration=15, sampling_rate=250, heart_rate=70)

# Process it
signals, info = nk.ecg_process(ecg, sampling_rate=250)

# Visualise the processing
nk.ecg_plot(signals, info)
https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_ecg.png

Respiration (RSP)

# Generate one minute of respiratory (RSP) signal (recorded at 250 samples / second)
rsp = nk.rsp_simulate(duration=60, sampling_rate=250, respiratory_rate=15)

# Process it
signals, info = nk.rsp_process(rsp, sampling_rate=250)

# Visualise the processing
nk.rsp_plot(signals, info)
https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_rsp.png

Photoplethysmography (PPG/BVP)

# Generate 15 seconds of PPG signal (recorded at 250 samples/second)
ppg = nk.ppg_simulate(duration=15, sampling_rate=250, heart_rate=70)

# Process it
signals, info = nk.ppg_process(ppg, sampling_rate=250)

# Visualize the processing
nk.ppg_plot(signals, info)

https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_ppg.png

Electromyography (EMG)

# Generate 10 seconds of EMG signal (recorded at 250 samples/second)
emg = nk.emg_simulate(duration=10, sampling_rate=250, burst_number=3)

# Process it
signals, info = nk.emg_process(emg, sampling_rate=250)

# Visualise the processing
nk.emg_plot(signals, info)

https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_emg.png

Electrooculography (EOG)

# Import EOG data
eog_signal = nk.data("eog_100hz")

# Process it
signals, info = nk.eog_process(eog_signal, sampling_rate=100)

# Plot
nk.eog_plot(signals, info)

https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_eog.png

Electrogastrography (EGG)

Consider helping us develop it!

Physiological Data Analysis

The analysis of physiological data usually comes in two types, event-related or interval-related.

https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/features.png

This type of analysis refers to physiological changes immediately occurring in response to an event. For instance, physiological changes following the presentation of a stimulus (e.g., an emotional stimulus) are indicated by the dotted lines in the figure above. In this situation, the analysis is epoch-based. An epoch is a short chunk of the physiological signal (usually < 10 seconds), that is locked to a specific stimulus and hence the physiological signals of interest are time-segmented accordingly. This is represented by the orange boxes in the figure above. In this case, using bio_analyze() will compute features like rate changes, peak characteristics, and phase characteristics.

This type of analysis refers to the physiological characteristics and features that occur over longer periods of time (from a few seconds to days of activity). Typical use cases are either periods of resting state, in which the activity is recorded for several minutes while the participant is at rest, or during different conditions in which there is no specific time-locked event (e.g., watching movies, listening to music, engaging in physical activity, etc.). For instance, this type of analysis is used when people want to compare the physiological activity under different intensities of physical exercise, different types of movies, or different intensities of stress. To compare event-related and interval-related analysis, we can refer to the example figure above. For example, a participant might be watching a 20s-long short film where particular stimuli of interest in the movie appear at certain time points (marked by the dotted lines). While event-related analysis pertains to the segments of signals within the orange boxes (to understand the physiological changes pertaining to the appearance of stimuli), interval-related analysis can be applied on the entire 20s duration to investigate how physiology fluctuates in general. In this case, using bio_analyze() will compute features such as rate characteristics (in particular, variability metrics) and peak characteristics.

Heart Rate Variability (HRV)

https://img.shields.io/badge/Tutorial-HRV-green

Check-out our Heart Rate Variability in Psychology: A Review of HRV Indices and an Analysis Tutorial paper for:

  • a comprehensive review of the most up-to-date HRV indices
  • a discussion of their significance in psychological research and practices
  • a step-by-step guide for HRV analysis using NeuroKit2
You can cite the paper as follows:

- Pham, T., Lau, Z. J., Chen, S. H. A., & Makowski, D. (2021).
Heart Rate Variability in Psychology: A Review of HRV Indices and an Analysis Tutorial.
Sensors, 21(12), 3998. https://doi:10.3390/s21123998
  • Compute HRV indices using Python
    • Time domain: RMSSD, MeanNN, SDNN, SDSD, CVNN, etc.
    • Frequency domain: Spectral power density in various frequency bands (Ultra low/ULF, Very low/VLF, Low/LF, High/HF, Very high/VHF), Ratio of LF to HF power, Normalized LF (LFn) and HF (HFn), Log transformed HF (LnHF).
    • Nonlinear domain: Spread of RR intervals (SD1, SD2, ratio between SD2 to SD1), Cardiac Sympathetic Index (CSI), Cardial Vagal Index (CVI), Modified CSI, Sample Entropy (SampEn).
# Download data
data = nk.data("bio_resting_8min_100hz")

# Find peaks
peaks, info = nk.ecg_peaks(data["ECG"], sampling_rate=100)

# Compute HRV indices
nk.hrv(peaks, sampling_rate=100, show=True)
>>>    HRV_RMSSD  HRV_MeanNN   HRV_SDNN  ...   HRV_CVI  HRV_CSI_Modified  HRV_SampEn
>>> 0  69.697983  696.395349  62.135891  ...  4.829101        592.095372    1.259931

https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_hrv.png

Miscellaneous

ECG Delineation

  • Delineate the QRS complex of an electrocardiac signal (ECG) including P-peaks, T-peaks, as well as their onsets and offsets.
# Download data
ecg_signal = nk.data(dataset="ecg_3000hz")

# Extract R-peaks locations
_, rpeaks = nk.ecg_peaks(ecg_signal, sampling_rate=3000)

# Delineate
signal, waves = nk.ecg_delineate(ecg_signal, rpeaks, sampling_rate=3000, method="dwt", show=True, show_type='all')
https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_delineate.png

Signal Processing

  • Signal processing functionalities
    • Filtering: Using different methods.
    • Detrending: Remove the baseline drift or trend.
    • Distorting: Add noise and artifacts.
# Generate original signal
original = nk.signal_simulate(duration=6, frequency=1)

# Distort the signal (add noise, linear trend, artifacts, etc.)
distorted = nk.signal_distort(original,
                              noise_amplitude=0.1,
                              noise_frequency=[5, 10, 20],
                              powerline_amplitude=0.05,
                              artifacts_amplitude=0.3,
                              artifacts_number=3,
                              linear_drift=0.5)

# Clean (filter and detrend)
cleaned = nk.signal_detrend(distorted)
cleaned = nk.signal_filter(cleaned, lowcut=0.5, highcut=1.5)

# Compare the 3 signals
plot = nk.signal_plot([original, distorted, cleaned])

https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_signalprocessing.png

Complexity (Entropy, Fractal Dimensions, ...)

  • Optimize complexity parameters (delay tau, dimension m, tolerance r)
# Generate signal
signal = nk.signal_simulate(frequency=[1, 3], noise=0.01, sampling_rate=200)

# Find optimal time delay, embedding dimension, and r
parameters = nk.complexity_optimize(signal, show=True)
https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_complexity_optimize.png
  • Compute complexity features
    • Entropy: Sample Entropy (SampEn), Approximate Entropy (ApEn), Fuzzy Entropy (FuzzEn), Multiscale Entropy (MSE), Shannon Entropy (ShEn)
    • Fractal dimensions: Correlation Dimension D2, ...
    • Detrended Fluctuation Analysis
nk.entropy_sample(signal)
nk.entropy_approximate(signal)

Signal Decomposition

# Create complex signal
signal = nk.signal_simulate(duration=10, frequency=1)  # High freq
signal += 3 * nk.signal_simulate(duration=10, frequency=3)  # Higher freq
signal += 3 * np.linspace(0, 2, len(signal))  # Add baseline and linear trend
signal += 2 * nk.signal_simulate(duration=10, frequency=0.1, noise=0)  # Non-linear trend
signal += np.random.normal(0, 0.02, len(signal))  # Add noise

# Decompose signal using Empirical Mode Decomposition (EMD)
components = nk.signal_decompose(signal, method='emd')
nk.signal_plot(components)  # Visualize components

# Recompose merging correlated components
recomposed = nk.signal_recompose(components, threshold=0.99)
nk.signal_plot(recomposed)  # Visualize components
https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_decomposition.png

Signal Power Spectrum Density (PSD)

# Generate complex signal
signal = nk.signal_simulate(duration=20, frequency=[0.5, 5, 10, 15], amplitude=[2, 1.5, 0.5, 0.3], noise=0.025)

# Get the PSD using different methods
welch = nk.signal_psd(signal, method="welch", min_frequency=1, max_frequency=20, show=True)
multitaper = nk.signal_psd(signal, method="multitapers", max_frequency=20, show=True)
lomb = nk.signal_psd(signal, method="lomb", min_frequency=1, max_frequency=20, show=True)
burg = nk.signal_psd(signal, method="burg", min_frequency=1, max_frequency=20, order=10, show=True)
https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_psd.png

Statistics

  • Highest Density Interval (HDI)
x = np.random.normal(loc=0, scale=1, size=100000)

ci_min, ci_max = nk.hdi(x, ci=0.95, show=True)
https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/master/docs/readme/README_hdi.png

Popularity

https://img.shields.io/pypi/dd/neurokit2 https://img.shields.io/github/stars/neuropsychology/NeuroKit https://img.shields.io/github/forks/neuropsychology/NeuroKit

NeuroKit2 is one of the most welcoming packages for new contributors and users, as well as the fastest-growing package. So stop hesitating and hop on board 🤗

https://raw.github.com/neuropsychology/NeuroKit/dev/docs/readme/README_popularity.png

Used at

ntu univ_paris univ_duke uni_auckland uni_pittsburh uni_washington

Disclaimer

The authors do not provide any warranty. If this software causes your keyboard to blow up, your brain to liquefy, your toilet to clog or a zombie plague to break loose, the authors CANNOT IN ANY WAY be held responsible.