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title
Setup

Setting up the tutorial environment

Binder

Using Binder is the easiest and fastest way to get started with the workshop. Binder is a virtual environment containing the full computing environment required in order to go through the workshop. Note that Binder hosts the environment on a cloud server and therefore internet access is required to launch it.

Setting up Binder

Step 1:

Click the link here to spin up the workshop environment: Binder Workshop You will see an interface that looks like the following:

JupyterHub{:class="img-static"}

The left-hand pane shows a list of workshop notebooks that contain the content of the workshop itself. Before jumping into the workshop notebooks we need to perform a setup step to pull the neuroimaging data that will be used in the workshop...

Step 2:

Once the environment is launched click the "Terminal" button under "Other".

JupyterHub Launch Terminal{:class="img-static"}

Clicking on this will launch a console. From here, copy and paste the following lines

# Move into the code directory
cd code

# Run the setup_workshop script
./setup_workshop

Hit enter once pasted and you should see the following

Console Filled{:class="img-static"}

This will begin downloading the data required for the workshop onto your Binder instance so that it is usable for the workshop. Once started do not close the tab by pressing the "x" button. Instead, you may now open and begin working through the workshop notebooks.

Getting workshop material locally

Method 1: Downloading directly from the repository

On the GitHub repo (this page), click the green button that says "Clone or download", then click Download ZIP. Once downloaded, extract the ZIP file.

Method 2: Using Git

Using this method requires a (very) useful piece of software called git. The process of installing git depends heavily on whether you're using MacOS, Windows or Linux. Follow the instructions in the link below to set up git on your PC:

Installing Git

Once you've installed git, open up your terminal and do the following:

git clone https://github.com/carpentries-incubator/SDC-BIDS-fMRI.git

This will download the repository directly into your current directory.

Setting up Python environment

We use python version 3.6.0, but any newer version should also work (Python 2 versions haven't been tested). There are many methods to setting up a python environment but we'd recommend using some sort of virtual environment as to not break your system python install. Two methods (of many) are listed below:

Method 1: Setting up conda environment (easiest) [Windows, Linux, MacOS]

For easy set-up we recommend Anaconda to manage python packages for scientific computing. Once installed, setting up the python environment can be done quite easily:

Windows

  1. Install Anaconda Python version 3.7
  2. Open Anaconda Navigator
  3. Click on Environments on the left pane
  4. Click Create then type in sdc-bids-fmri
  5. In the sdc-bids-fmri entry click the play button then click Open Terminal
  6. In terminal type:
conda install -y numpy pandas scipy scikit-learn matplotlib jupyter ipykernel nb_conda
conda install -y -c conda-forge awscli
pip install nilearn nibabel
  1. Close the terminal, click on the play button again and open Jupyter Notebook
  2. Navigate to sdc-bids-fmri folder you downloaded earlier.
  3. Done!

Linux and MacOS

After installing Anaconda, open terminal and type:

cd sdc-bids-fmri
conda create -p ./sdc-fmri
source activate $(pwd)/sdc-fmri
conda install numpy pandas scipy scikit-learn matplotlib jupyter ipykernel nb_conda
conda install -c conda-forge awscli
pip install nilearn nibabel

Method 2: Using pyenv [Linux, MacOS]

An alternative method uses pyenv with pyenv virtualenv. This is a favourite because it seamlessly integrates multiple python versions and environments into your system while maintaining use of pip (instead of conda).

cd sdc-bids-fmri
pyenv virtualenv 3.6.0 sdc-fmri
echo sdc-fmri > .python-version
pip install --requirement requirements.txt

Acquiring the data

This tutorial uses data derived from the UCLA Consortium for Neuropsychiatric Phenomics LA5c Study [1].

To download (warning: large download size!) the subset of the data used for the tutorial:

cd sdc-bids-fmri

# download T1w scans
cat download_list | \
  xargs -I '{}' aws s3 sync --no-sign-request \
  s3://openneuro/ds000030/ds000030_R1.0.5/uncompressed/{}/anat \
  ./data/ds000030/{}/anat

# download resting state fMRI scans
cat download_list | \
  xargs -I '{}' aws s3 sync --no-sign-request \
  s3://openneuro/ds000030/ds000030_R1.0.5/uncompressed/{}/func \
  ./data/ds000030/{}/func \
  --exclude '*' \
  --include '*task-rest_bold*'

# download fmriprep preprocessed anat data
cat download_list | \
  xargs -I '{}' aws s3 sync --no-sign-request \
  s3://openneuro/ds000030/ds000030_R1.0.5/uncompressed/derivatives/fmriprep/{}/anat \
  ./data/ds000030/derivatives/fmriprep/{}/anat

# download fmriprep preprocessed func data
cat download_list | \
  xargs -I '{}' aws s3 sync --no-sign-request \
  s3://openneuro/ds000030/ds000030_R1.0.5/uncompressed/derivatives/fmriprep/{}/func \
  ./data/ds000030/derivatives/fmriprep/{}/func \
  --exclude '*' \
  --include '*task-rest_bold*'

Finally open up the jupyter notebook to explore the tutorials:

cd sdc-bids-fmri

#Include below line if using anaconda environment
source activate $(pwd)/sdc-fmri

jupyter notebook

Reference

[1] Gorgolewski KJ, Durnez J and Poldrack RA. Preprocessed Consortium for Neuropsychiatric Phenomics dataset [version 2; referees: 2 approved]. F1000Research 2017, 6:1262 (https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.11964.2)

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