Skip to main content

Large-scale neural data analysis in Spark

Project description

https://travis-ci.org/freeman-lab/thunder.png

thunder

Large-scale neural data analysis with Spark - project page

About

thunder is a library for analyzing large-scale neural data. It’s fast to run, easy to develop for, and can be used interactively. It is built on Spark, a new framework for cluster computing.

thunder includes utilties for data loading and saving, and modular functions for time series statistics, matrix decompositions, and fitting algorithms. Analyses can easily be scripted or combined. It is written in Spark’s Python API (Pyspark), making use of scipy, numpy, and scikit-learn.

Quick start

thunder is designed to run on a cluster, but local testing is a great way to learn and develop. Many computers can install it with just a few simple steps. If you aren’t currently using Python for scientific computing, Anaconda is highly recommended.

  1. Download the latest, pre-built version of Spark, and set one environmental variable

export SPARK_HOME=/your/path/to/spark
  1. Install thunder

pip install thunder-python
  1. Start thunder from the terminal

thunder
>> from thunder.factorization import ICA
>> data = tsc.makeExample("ica")
>> model = ICA(c=2).fit(data)

To run in iPython, just set this environmental variable before staring:

export IPYTHON=1

To run analyses as standalone jobs, use the submit script

thunder-submit <package/analysis> <datadirectory> <outputdirectory> <opts>

We also include a script for launching an Amazon EC2 cluster with thunder presintalled

thunder-ec2 -k mykey -i mykey.pem -s <number-of-nodes> launch <cluster-name>

Analyses

thunder currently includes five packages: classification (decoding), clustering, factorization, regression, and timeseries, as well as an utils package for loading and saving (see Input format and Output format) and other utilities (e.g. matrix operations). Scripts can be used to run standalone analyses, but the underlying classes and functions can be used from within the PySpark shell for easy interactive analysis.

Input and output

thunder is built around a commmon input format for time series data: a set of signals or channels as key-value pairs, where the key is an identifier, and the value is a time series. In neural imaging data, for example, each record would be a voxel or an ROI, the key an xyz coordinate, and the value a flouresence time series.

These key-value records can be derived from variety of cluster-accessible formats. thunder currently includes methods for loading data from text or flat binary files stored locally, in HDFS, or on a networked file system, and preliminary support for importing and converting data from other formats.

All metadata (e.g. parameters of the stimulus or behavior for regression analyses) can be provided as numpy arrays or loaded from MAT files, see relavant functions for more details.

Results can be visualized directly from the python shell or in iPython notebook, or saved as images, MAT files. Other output formats coming soon.

Road map

If you have other ideas or want to contribute, submit an issue or pull request!

  • Integrate more scikit learn functionality

  • Analysis-specific visualizations

  • Input format support: HD5, tif

  • Port versions of most common workflows to scala

  • Unified metadata representation

  • Streaming analyses

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

thunder-python-0.3.0.tar.gz (418.5 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page