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jsiegle authored
The IntanThread can report TTL events on its 6 input channels. This was tested
with an Arduino; input detection is fast and reliable.

The IntanThread also generates its own timestamps, allowing the software to move
toward a framework in which timestamps come from input sources, rather than
from the RecordNode.

Finally, an ArduinoOutput module was added, which allows the software to
communicate with an Arduino via serial output.
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Welcome to the Open Ephys project!

This GUI was designed to provide a fast and flexible interface for acquiring and visualizing data from extracellular electrodes. It's still lacking many features, and isn't yet robust enough for widespread release, but the overall framework will make it easy to extend.

Everything is written in C++, with the help of the Juce library. Juce is lightweight, easy to learn, and completely cross-platform. What's more, it includes a variety of classes for audio processing, which have been co-opted to process neural data. It might be necessary to create custom data processing classes in the future, but for now, Juce takes care of a lot of the messy bits involved in analyzing many parallel data streams.

This repository contains all of the files (save for a few dependencies) you'll need to compile and run the GUI on Linux and Mac OS X. The makefile (for Linux) and XCode project (for Mac) are located in the Builds/ directory.

We recommend reading through the GitHub wiki before attempting to make any changes.

If you want to add files, or create Windows binaries, you'll have to do that through "The Jucer," using the "open-ephys.jucer" file. The Jucer makefiles are located in the JuceLibraryCode/jucer/Builds folder, or as part of the Juce library package on SourceForge.