Glossary#

The Glossary provides short definitions of vocabulary specific to MNE-Python and general neuroimaging concepts. If you think a term is missing, please consider creating a new issue or opening a pull request to add it.

annotations#

An annotation is defined by an onset, a duration, and a textual description. It can contain information about the experiment, but also details on signals marked by a human such as bad data segments, sleep stages, sleep events (spindles, K-complex), and so on. An Annotations object is a container for multiple annotations, which is available as the annotations attribute of Raw objects. See Annotations for the class definition and Parsing events from raw data for a short tutorial. See also events.

beamformer#

A beamformer is a popular source estimation approach that uses a set of spatial filters (beamformer weights) to compute time courses of sources at predefined locations. See beamformer.Beamformer for the class definition. See also LCMV.

BEM#
boundary element model#
boundary element method#

BEM is the acronym for boundary element method or boundary element model. Both are related to the definion of the conductor model in the forward model computation. The boundary element model consists of surfaces such as the inner skull, outer skull, and outer skin (scalp) that define compartments of tissues of the head. You can compute the BEM surfaces with bem.make_watershed_bem() or bem.make_flash_bem(). See Head model and forward computation for a usage demo.

channels#

Channels refer to MEG sensors, EEG electrodes or other sensors such as EOG, ECG, sEEG, ECoG, etc. Channels usually have a type (such as gradiometer), and a unit (such as T/m) used e.g. for plotting. See also data channels and non-data channels.

data channels#

Many functions in MNE-Python operate on “data channels” by default. These are channels that contain electrophysiological data from the brain, as opposed to other channel types such as EOG, ECG, stimulus/trigger, or acquisition system status data (see non-data channels). The set of channels considered “data channels” in MNE contains the following types (together with scale factors for plotting):

  • 'mag': Magnetometers (scaled by 1e+15 to plot in fT)

  • 'grad': Gradiometers (scaled by 1e+13 to plot in fT/cm)

  • 'eeg': EEG (scaled by 1e+06 to plot in µV)

  • 'csd': Current source density (scaled by 1000 to plot in mV/m²)

  • 'seeg': sEEG (scaled by 1000 to plot in mV)

  • 'ecog': ECoG (scaled by 1e+06 to plot in µV)

  • 'dbs': DBS (scaled by 1e+06 to plot in µV)

  • 'hbo': Oxyhemoglobin (scaled by 1e+06 to plot in µM)

  • 'hbr': Deoxyhemoglobin (scaled by 1e+06 to plot in µM)

  • 'fnirs_cw_amplitude': fNIRS (CW amplitude) (scaled by 1 to plot in V)

  • 'fnirs_fd_ac_amplitude': fNIRS (FD AC amplitude) (scaled by 1 to plot in V)

  • 'fnirs_fd_phase': fNIRS (FD phase) (scaled by 1 to plot in rad)

  • 'fnirs_od': fNIRS (OD) (scaled by 1 to plot in V)

DC#
direct current#

The part of a signal that stays constant over time. The “DC offset” of electrophysiological signals is often dealt with by high-pass filtering or by subtracting some suitable baseline.

DICS#
dynamic imaging of coherent sources#

Dynamic Imaging of Coherent Sources is a method for computing source power in different frequency bands. See Compute source power using DICS beamformer and beamformer.make_dics() for more details.

digitization#

Digitization is a procedure of recording the head shape and locations of fiducial coils (or HPI) and/or EEG electrodes on the head. They are represented as a set of points in 3D space. See Reading sensor digitization files and Supported formats for digitized 3D locations.

dipole#
ECD#
equivalent current dipole#

An equivalent current dipole (ECD) is an approximate representation of post-synaptic activity in a small cortical region. The intracellular currents that give rise to measurable EEG/MEG signals are thought to originate in populations of cortical pyramidal neurons aligned perpendicularly to the cortical surface. Because the length of such current sources is very small relative to the distance between the cortex and the EEG/MEG sensors, the fields measured by these techniques are well approximated by (i.e., equivalent to) fields generated by idealized point sources (dipoles) located on the cortical surface.

dSPM#
dynamic statistical parametric mapping#

Dynamic statistical parametric mapping (dSPM) gives a noise-normalized minimum-norm estimate at a given source location. It is calculated by dividing the activity estimate at each source location by the baseline standard deviation of the noise.

eLORETA#
sLORETA#

eLORETA and sLORETA (exact and standardized low resolution brain electromagnetic tomography) are linear source estimation techniques like dSPM and MNE. sLORETA outputs standardized values (like dSPM), while eLORETA generates normalized current estimates. See minimum_norm.apply_inverse(), Source localization with MNE, dSPM, sLORETA, and eLORETA, and Compute sLORETA inverse solution on raw data.

epochs#

Epochs (sometimes called “trials” in other software packages) are equal-length segments of data extracted from continuous data. Usually, epochs are extracted around stimulus events or responses, though sometimes sequential or overlapping epochs are used (e.g., for analysis of resting-state activity). See Epochs for the class definition and The Epochs data structure: discontinuous data for a narrative overview.

events#

Events correspond to specific time points in raw data, such as triggers, experimental condition events, etc. MNE-Python represents events with integers stored in NumPy arrays of shape (n_events, 3). The first column contains the event onset (in samples) with first_samp included. The last column contains the event code. The second column contains the signal value of the immediately preceding sample, and reflects the fact that event arrays sometimes originate from analog voltage channels (“trigger channels” or “stim channels”). In most cases, the second column is all zeros and can be ignored. Event arrays can be created with mne.make_fixed_length_events(), mne.read_events(), and mne.find_events(). See Parsing events from raw data for a short tutorial. See also annotations.

evoked#

Evoked data are obtained by averaging epochs. Typically, an evoked object is constructed for each subject and each condition, but it can also be obtained by averaging a list of evoked objects over different subjects. See EvokedArray for the class definition and The Evoked data structure: evoked/averaged data for a narrative overview.

fiducial#
fiducial point#
anatomical landmark#

Fiducials are objects placed in the field of view of an imaging system to act as known spatial references that are easy to localize. In neuroimaging, fiducials are often placed on anatomical landmarks such as the nasion (NAS) or left/right preauricular points (LPA and RPA).

These known reference locations are used to define a coordinate system for localizing sensors (hence NAS, LPA and RPA are often called “cardinal points” because they define the cardinal directions of the head coordinate system). The cardinal points are also useful when co-registering measurements in different coordinate systems (such as aligning EEG sensor locations to an MRI of the head).

Due to the common neuroimaging practice of placing fiducial objects on anatomical landmarks, the terms “fiducial”, “anatomical landmark”, and “cardinal point” are often (erroneously) used interchangeably.

first_samp#

The first_samp attribute of Raw objects is an integer representing the number of time samples that passed between the onset of the hardware acquisition system and the time when data recording started. This approach to sample numbering is a peculiarity of VectorView MEG systems, but for consistency it is present in all Raw objects regardless of the source of the data. In other words, first_samp will be 0 in Raw objects loaded from non-VectorView data files. See also last_samp.

forward#
forward solution#

The forward solution is a linear operator capturing the relationship between each dipole location in the source space and the corresponding field distribution measured by the sensors (the “lead field matrix”). Calculating a forward solution requires a conductivity model of the head, which encapsulates the geometries and electrical conductivities of the different tissue compartments (see boundary element model and bem.ConductorModel). For information about the Forward object and the data it stores, see mne.Forward.

FreeSurfer LUT#
LUT#

A FreeSurfer lookup table (LUT) provides a mapping between a given volumetric atlas or surface label name, its integer value (e.g., in aparc+aseg.mgz), and its standard color (see the FreeSurfer wiki for more information). Custom LUTs can be also be created from different surface parcellations, see for example this comment about HCPMMP.

GFP#
global field power#

Global Field Power (GFP) is a measure of the (non-)uniformity of the electromagnetic field at the sensors. It is typically calculated as the standard deviation of the sensor values at each time point. Thus, it is a one-dimensional time series capturing the spatial variability of the signal across sensor locations.

HED#
hierarchical event descriptors#

Hierarchical event descriptors (HED) are tags that use keywords separated by slashes (/) to describe different types of experimental events (for example, stimulus/circle/red/left and stimulus/circle/blue/left). These tags can be used to group experimental events and select event types for analysis.

HPI#
cHPI#
head position indicator#

Head position indicators (HPI, sometimes cHPI for continuous head position indicators) are small coils attached to a subject’s head during MEG acquisition. Each coil emits a sinusoidal signal of a different frequency, which is picked up by the MEG sensors and can be used to infer the head position. With cHPI, the sinusoidal signals are typically set at frequencies above any neural signal of interest, and thus can be removed after head position correction via low-pass filtering. See Extracting and visualizing subject head movement.

info#
measurement info#

A “measurement info” (or short “info”) object is a collection of metadata related to Raw, Epochs, or Evoked objects. It contains channel locations and types, sampling frequency, preprocessing history such as filters, etc. See The Info data structure for a narrative overview.

inverse#
inverse operator#

The inverse operator is an \(M \times N\) matrix (\(M\) source locations by \(N\) sensors) that, when applied to the sensor signals, yields estimates of the brain activity that gave rise to the observed sensor signals. Inverse operators are available for the linear inverse methods MNE, dSPM, sLORETA, and eLORETA. See minimum_norm.apply_inverse().

label#

A Label refers to a defined region in the cortex, often called a region of interest (ROI) in the literature. Labels can be defined anatomically (based on the physical structure of the cortex) or functionally (based on cortical responses to specific stimuli). See also ROI.

last_samp#

The last_samp attribute of Raw objects is an integer representing the number of time samples that passed between the start and end of data recording. This approach to sample numbering is a peculiarity of VectorView MEG systems, but for consistency it is present in all Raw objects regardless of the source of the data. See also first_samp.

layout#

A Layout gives sensor positions in two dimensions (defined by x, y, width, and height values for each sensor). It is primarily used for illustrative purposes (i.e., making diagrams of approximate sensor positions in cartoons of the head, so-called topographies or topomaps). See also montage.

LCMV#
LCMV beamformer#

Linearly constrained minimum variance beamformer attempt to estimate activity for a given source while suppressing cross-talk from other regions (beamformer.make_lcmv()). See also beamformer.

maximum intensity projection#

A method to display pixel-wise activity within some volume by finding the maximum value along a vector from the viewer to the pixel (i.e., along the vector pependicular to the view plane).

MNE#
minimum-norm estimate#
minimum-norm estimation#

Minimum-norm estimation (MNE) can be used to generate a distributed map of activation on a source space (usually on a cortical surface). MNE uses a linear inverse operator to project sensor measurements into the source space. The inverse operator is computed from the forward solution for a subject and an estimate of the noise covariance of sensor measurements.

montage#

EEG channel names and relative positions of sensors on the scalp. While layouts are 2D locations, montages are 3D locations. A montage can also contain locations for HPI points, fiducial points, or extra head shape points. See DigMontage for the class definition. See also layout.

morphing#

Morphing refers to the operation of transferring source estimates from one anatomy to another. It is known as realignment in the fMRI literature. This operation is necessary for group studies to get the data into a common space for statistical analysis. See Morphing and averaging source estimates for more details.

noise covariance#

The noise covariance is a matrix that contains the covariance between data channels. It is a square matrix with shape n_channels \(\times\) n_channels. It is especially useful when working with multiple sensor types (e.g. EEG and MEG). In practice, the matrix is estimated from baseline periods or empty room measurements, and it also provides a noise model that can be used for subsequent analysis (like source imaging).

non-data channels#

All types of channels other than data channels. The set of channels considered “non-data channels” in MNE contains the following types (together with scale factors for plotting):

  • 'eog': EOG (scaled by 1e+06 to plot in µV)

  • 'ecg': ECG (scaled by 1e+06 to plot in µV)

  • 'resp': Respiration monitoring channel

  • 'emg': EMG (scaled by 1e+06 to plot in µV)

  • 'ref_meg': Reference Magnetometers (scaled by 1e+15 to plot in fT)

  • 'misc': misc (scaled by 1 to plot in AU)

  • 'stim': Stimulus

  • 'chpi': Continuous head position indicator (HPI) coil channels

  • 'exci': Flux excitation channel

  • 'ias': Internal Active Shielding data (Triux systems)

  • 'syst': System status channel information (Triux systems)

  • 'bio': BIO (scaled by 1e+06 to plot in µV)

  • 'temperature': Temperature (scaled by 1 to plot in C)

  • 'gsr': Galvanic skin response (scaled by 1 to plot in S)

  • 'gof': Goodness of fit (scaled by 1 to plot in GOF)

  • 'dipole': Dipole (scaled by 1e+09 to plot in nAm)

  • 'eyegaze': Eye-tracking (Gaze position) (scaled by 1 to plot in rad)

  • 'pupil': Eye-tracking (Pupil size) (scaled by 1e+06 to plot in µm)

  • 'whitened': Whitened data (scaled by 1 to plot in Z)

OPM#
optically pumped magnetometer#

An optically pumped magnetometer (OPM) is a type of magnetometer that uses a laser passing through a gas (e.g., rubidium) to sense magnetic fluctuations. OPMs can operate near room temperature.

path-like#

Something that acts like a path in a file system. This can be a str or a pathlib.Path.

pick#

An integer that is the index of a channel in the measurement info. It allows to obtain the information on a channel in the list of channels available in info['chs'].

projector#
SSP#

A projector, also referred to as Signal Space Projection (SSP), defines a linear operation applied spatially to EEG or MEG data. A matrix multiplication of an SSP projector with the data will reduce the rank of the data by projecting it to a lower-dimensional subspace. Such projections are typically applied to both the data and the forward operator when performing source localization. Note that EEG average referencing can be done using such a projection operator. Projectors are stored alongside data in the measurement info in the field info['projs'].

RAS#

Right-Anterior-Superior, denoting the standard way to define coordinate frames in MNE-Python:

R

+X is right, -X is left

A

+Y is anterior (front), -Y is posterior (rear)

S

+Z is superior (top), -Z is inferior (bottom)

raw#

Raw objects hold continuous data (preprocessed or not), typically obtained from reading recordings stored in a file. See RawArray for the class definition and The Raw data structure: continuous data for a narrative overview.

ROI#
region of interest#

A spatial region where an experimental effect is expected to manifest. This can be a collection of sensors or, when performing inverse imaging, a set of vertices on the cortical surface or within the cortical volume. See also label.

selection#

A selection is a set of picked channels (for example, all sensors falling within a region of interest).

sensor types#

All the sensors handled by MNE-Python can be divided into two categories: data channels and non-data channels.

source space#

A source space specifies where in the brain source amplitudes are estimated. It corresponds to locations of a set of candidate equivalent current dipoles. MNE-Python mostly works with source spaces defined on the cortical surfaces estimated by FreeSurfer from a T1-weighted MRI image. See Head model and forward computation to read about how to compute a forward operator in a source space. See SourceSpaces for the class definition and information about the data it contains.

SQUID#
superconducting quantum interference device#

A superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) is a type of magnetometer that uses superconducting materials to sense magnetic fluctuations. Standard low-temperature SQUID sensors typically found in MEG systems operate at temperatures within a few degrees of absolute zero (e.g., below 4 K).

STC#
source estimate#
source time course#

Source estimates, commonly referred to as STC (Source Time Courses), are obtained from source localization methods such as dSPM, sLORETA, LCMV, or MxNE. STCs contain the amplitudes of the neural sources over time. In MNE-Python, SourceEstimate objects only store the amplitudes of activation but not the locations of the sources. The locations are stored separately in the SourceSpaces object that was used to compute the forward operator. See SourceEstimate, VolSourceEstimate, VectorSourceEstimate, and MixedSourceEstimate.

stim channel#
trigger channel#

A stim channel or trigger channel is a channel that encodes events during the recording. It is typically a channel that is always zero and takes positive values when something happens (such as the onset of a stimulus or a subject response). Stim channels are often prefixed with STI to distinguish them from other channel types. See What is a STIM channel? for more details.

template montage#

An idealized EEG montage, often provided by the manufacturer of the EEG system or cap. The electrode positions were not actually measured on the participants’ heads, but rather were calculated assuming optimal theoretical placement on a sphere.

tfr#

A time-frequency representation (TFR) is often a spectrogram (STFT) or scaleogram (wavelet) showing the frequency content as a function of time.

trans#

A coordinate frame affine transformation, usually between the Neuromag head coordinate frame and the MRI Surface RAS coordinate frame used by Freesurfer.

whitening#

A linear operation that transforms data with a known covariance structure into “whitened data”, which has a covariance structure equal to the identity matrix. In other words, whitening creates virtual channels that are uncorrelated and have unit variance. This is also known as a sphering transformation.

The term “whitening” comes from the fact that light with a flat frequency spectrum in the visible range is white, whereas non-uniform frequency spectra lead to perception of different colors (e.g., “pink noise” has a 1/f characteristic, which for visible light would appear pink).