The Virtual Brain Project (TVB Project) has the purpose of offering some modern tools to the Neurosciences community, for computing, simulating and analyzing functional and structural data of human brains.
"TVB Scientific Library" is the most important scientific contribution of TVB Project, but only a part of our code. In order to use this TVB Python Library (modify/run/test), you are advised to follow the steps described here: http://docs.thevirtualbrain.com/advanced/link_contributor.html
The interaction with TVB source code is recommended for advanced users only, for which the concepts proposed by TVB are known and understood, and which also have some programming knowledge.
"TVB Scientific Library" comes in two major forms for code-contributors: as a light-weight Python library, or plugged into TVB framework (including Web interface and Persistence of data layers). Depending on your needs and resources, you could use any of the two available options for contributing and testing new code.
"TVB Scientific Library" is a light-weight, stand-alone Python library that contains all the needed packages in order to run simulations and analysis on data without the need for the entire TVB Framework. This implies that no storage will be provided so data from each session will be lost on close. You need to either persist it yourself in some manner or use the full TVBFramework where HDF5 / database storage is provided as default.
For more details, check: http://www.thevirtualbrain.org/
"TVB Scientific Library" contains the following packages: basic, datatypes, simulator and analyzers. The dependencies between these packages can be seen in tvb-package-diagram.jpg . Following is a short description of each of these packages:
- tvb.basic
This package is the base of TVB and holds sub-packages that are used by most of the other packages like logging, global settings and the TVB traits package. You should rarely (if at all) need to change code in this package, and should know exactly what you are doing before attempting to change anything from here.
- tvb.datatypes
The simulator and analyzers packages (as well as uploaders and visualizers in TVB Framework) will need to have a common "language" in order to work with the same data. In TVB architecture, that "common language" is represented by Data Types. TVB Data Types declarations are located in this package.
Most of the datatypes here have a diamond like inheritance structure of the following form:
DataTypeData
|
/ \\
DataTypeFramework DataTypeScientific
\ /
|
DataType
The DataTypeData holds the actual structure of the datatype. DataTypeScientific holds any methods required from a scientific point of view. DataTypeFramework should just be ignored from a library user point of view as it holds framework related methods and will be removed altogether in the near future. DataType just brings all the above together and is the class you should actually use in your code.
- tvb.simulator
The Simulation Component is the most important component in The Virtual Brain solution, as it is the component responsible for all the scientific computation related to brain models and data.
You can find various demos of using the simulator under tvb/simulator/demos as well as some nice tutorials under tvb/simulator/doc/tutorials/ .
- tvb.analyzers
Holds modules that can run various analysis of data resulted from the simulator. There are a few demos which use the PCA analyzer like tvb/simulator/demos/pca_analyse_view_region and tvb/simulator/demos/pca_analyse_view_surface . TVB is not strong in doing data analysis, we barely have a minimum set of analyzers for immediate needs.
NOTE:
To contribute to this repo, you are advised to first fork it under GitHub (through the web ui), and next clone that fork on your machine, and use it as you use any other git repository.
- For issue tracking we are using Jira: http://req.thevirtualbrain.org
- For API documentation and live demos, have a look here: http://docs.thevirtualbrain.org
- A public mailing list for users of The Virtual Brain can be joined and followed using: [email protected]
- Raw demo IPython Notebooks can be found under: https://github.com/the-virtual-brain/tvb-documentation/tree/master/demos