Skip to content

LabStreamingLayer super repository comprising submodules for LSL and associated apps.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

Artinis-Medical-Systems-B-V/labstreaminglayer

 
 

Repository files navigation

Quick Start

The lab streaming layer (LSL) is a system for the unified collection of measurement time series in research experiments that handles both the networking, time-synchronization, (near-) real-time access as well as optionally the centralized collection, viewing and disk recording of the data.

The most up-to-date version of this document can always be found in the main repository README and the online documentation.

The most common way to use LSL is to use one or more applications with integrated LSL functionality to stream data from one or more devices (e.g., EEG and Eye Tracker) and from a task application (NBS Presentation, psychopy, etc.) over the local network and record the with the LabRecorder.

Most LSL Applications will come bundled with its own copy of the LSL library (i.e., lsl.dll for a Windows application). However, many applications and interfaces (e.g., like pylsl) do not ship with liblsl.dylib or liblsl.so on Mac or Linux, respectively. In those cases, it is necessary to install liblsl separately and make it available to the application or interface. See the liblsl repo for more info.

  • Take a look at the list of supported devices and follow the instructions to start streaming data from your device. If your device is not in the list then see the Getting Help section below.
  • Download LabRecorder from its release page. (Note that LabRecorder saves data to Extensible Data Format (xdf) which has its own set of tools for loading data after finishing recording.)
  • Go through the Tutorials.
  • Use LSL from your scientific computing environment. LSL has many language interfaces, including Python and Matlab.
    • Python users need to pip install pylsl then try some of the provided examples.
    • The Matlab interface is also popular but requires a little more work to get started; please see its README for more info.

If you are not sure what you are looking for then try browsing through the code which has submodule links to different repositories for tools and devices (Apps) and language interfaces (LSL). When you land in a new repository then be sure to read its README and look at its Releases page.

Getting Help

If you are having trouble with LSL then there are few things you can do to get help.

  • Read the docs
  • Search GitHub issues in the main repository, in the old archived repository, and in the submodule for your App or language interface of interest.
  • Create a new GitHub issue. Please use the repository specific to the item you are having difficulty with. e.g. if you are having trouble with LabRecorder then open a new issue in its repository. If you don't know which repository is best then you can use the parent sccn/labstreaminglayer repository.
  • Join the LabStreamingLayer #users channel on Slack. Invite Link. Someone there may be able to get to the bottom of your problem through conversation.
  • You may also wish to try the very new labstreaminglayer.org forum

About

LabStreamingLayer super repository comprising submodules for LSL and associated apps.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • HTML 71.3%
  • CMake 24.2%
  • Shell 4.5%