Built-in plotting methods for Raw objects

This tutorial shows how to plot continuous data as a time series, how to plot the spectral density of continuous data, and how to plot the sensor locations and projectors stored in Raw objects.

As usual we’ll start by importing the modules we need, loading some example data, and cropping the Raw object to just 60 seconds before loading it into RAM to save memory:

import os
import mne

sample_data_folder = mne.datasets.sample.data_path()
sample_data_raw_file = os.path.join(sample_data_folder, 'MEG', 'sample',
                                    'sample_audvis_raw.fif')
raw = mne.io.read_raw_fif(sample_data_raw_file)
raw.crop(tmax=60).load_data()

Out:

Opening raw data file /home/circleci/mne_data/MNE-sample-data/MEG/sample/sample_audvis_raw.fif...
    Read a total of 3 projection items:
        PCA-v1 (1 x 102)  idle
        PCA-v2 (1 x 102)  idle
        PCA-v3 (1 x 102)  idle
    Range : 25800 ... 192599 =     42.956 ...   320.670 secs
Ready.
Reading 0 ... 36037  =      0.000 ...    60.000 secs...
Measurement date December 03, 2002 19:01:10 GMT
Experimenter MEG
Participant Unknown
Digitized points 146 points
Good channels 204 Gradiometers, 102 Magnetometers, 9 Stimulus, 60 EEG, 1 EOG
Bad channels MEG 2443, EEG 053
EOG channels EOG 061
ECG channels Not available
Sampling frequency 600.61 Hz
Highpass 0.10 Hz
Lowpass 172.18 Hz
Projections PCA-v1: off
PCA-v2: off
PCA-v3: off
Filenames sample_audvis_raw.fif
Duration 00:01:00 (HH:MM:SS)


We’ve seen in a previous tutorial how to plot data from a Raw object using matplotlib, but Raw objects also have several built-in plotting methods:

The first three are discussed here in detail; the last two are shown briefly and covered in-depth in other tutorials.

Interactive data browsing with Raw.plot()

The plot method of Raw objects provides a versatile interface for exploring continuous data. For interactive viewing and data quality checking, it can be called with no additional parameters:

40 visualize raw

It may not be obvious when viewing this tutorial online, but by default, the plot method generates an interactive plot window with several useful features:

  • It spaces the channels equally along the y-axis.

    • 20 channels are shown by default; you can scroll through the channels using the and arrow keys, or by clicking on the colored scroll bar on the right edge of the plot.

    • The number of visible channels can be adjusted by the n_channels parameter, or changed interactively using page up and page down keys.

    • You can toggle the display to “butterfly” mode (superimposing all channels of the same type on top of one another) by pressing b, or start in butterfly mode by passing the butterfly=True parameter.

  • It shows the first 10 seconds of the Raw object.

    • You can shorten or lengthen the window length using home and end keys, or start with a specific window duration by passing the duration parameter.

    • You can scroll in the time domain using the and arrow keys, or start at a specific point by passing the start parameter. Scrolling using shift or shift scrolls a full window width at a time.

  • It allows clicking on channels to mark/unmark as “bad”.

    • When the plot window is closed, the Raw object’s info attribute will be updated, adding or removing the newly (un)marked channels to/from the Info object’s bads field (A.K.A. raw.info['bads']).

  • It allows interactive annotation of the raw data.

    • This allows you to mark time spans that should be excluded from future computations due to large movement artifacts, line noise, or other distortions of the signal. Annotation mode is entered by pressing a. See Basic annotation for details.

  • It automatically applies any projectors before plotting the data.

    • These can be enabled/disabled interactively by clicking the Proj button at the lower right corner of the plot window, or disabled by default by passing the proj=False parameter. See Background on projectors and projections for more info on projectors.

These and other keyboard shortcuts are listed in the Help window, accessed through the Help button at the lower left corner of the plot window. Other plot properties (such as color of the channel traces, channel order and grouping, simultaneous plotting of events, scaling, clipping, filtering, etc.) can also be adjusted through parameters passed to the plot method; see the docstring for details.

Plotting spectral density of continuous data

To visualize the frequency content of continuous data, the Raw object provides a plot_psd to plot the spectral density of the data.

raw.plot_psd(average=True)
EEG, Gradiometers, Magnetometers

Out:

Effective window size : 3.410 (s)
Effective window size : 3.410 (s)
Effective window size : 3.410 (s)

If the data have been filtered, vertical dashed lines will automatically indicate filter boundaries. The spectrum for each channel type is drawn in its own subplot; here we’ve passed the average=True parameter to get a summary for each channel type, but it is also possible to plot each channel individually, with options for how the spectrum should be computed, color-coding the channels by location, and more. For example, here is a plot of just a few sensors (specified with the picks parameter), color-coded by spatial location (via the spatial_colors parameter, see the documentation of plot_psd for full details):

midline = ['EEG 002', 'EEG 012', 'EEG 030', 'EEG 048', 'EEG 058', 'EEG 060']
raw.plot_psd(picks=midline)
EEG

Out:

Effective window size : 3.410 (s)

Alternatively, you can plot the PSD for every sensor on its own axes, with the axes arranged spatially to correspond to sensor locations in space, using plot_psd_topo:

40 visualize raw

Out:

Effective window size : 3.410 (s)

This plot is also interactive; hovering over each “thumbnail” plot will display the channel name in the bottom left of the plot window, and clicking on a thumbnail plot will create a second figure showing a larger version of the selected channel’s spectral density (as if you had called plot_psd on that channel).

By default, plot_psd_topo will show only the MEG channels if MEG channels are present; if only EEG channels are found, they will be plotted instead:

raw.copy().pick_types(meg=False, eeg=True).plot_psd_topo()
40 visualize raw

Out:

Removing projector <Projection | PCA-v1, active : False, n_channels : 102>
Removing projector <Projection | PCA-v2, active : False, n_channels : 102>
Removing projector <Projection | PCA-v3, active : False, n_channels : 102>
Effective window size : 3.410 (s)

Plotting sensor locations from Raw objects

The channel locations in a Raw object can be easily plotted with the plot_sensors method. A brief example is shown here; notice that channels in raw.info['bads'] are plotted in red. More details and additional examples are given in the tutorial Working with sensor locations.

raw.plot_sensors(ch_type='eeg')
40 visualize raw

Plotting projectors from Raw objects

As seen in the output of mne.io.read_raw_fif above, there are projectors included in the example Raw file (representing environmental noise in the signal, so it can later be “projected out” during preprocessing). You can visualize these projectors using the plot_projs_topomap method. By default it will show one figure per channel type for which projectors are present, and each figure will have one subplot per projector. The three projectors in this file were only computed for magnetometers, so one figure with three subplots is generated. More details on working with and plotting projectors are given in Background on projectors and projections and Repairing artifacts with SSP.

raw.plot_projs_topomap(colorbar=True)
PCA-v1, PCA-v2, PCA-v3

Total running time of the script: ( 0 minutes 15.144 seconds)

Estimated memory usage: 212 MB

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