Comparing EDFbrowser Plugins: Extend Functionality for Clinical Use
EDFbrowser Tips and Shortcuts for Faster EEG Analysis
1. Optimize file loading and navigation
- Use the command-line launcher to open files directly (edfbrowser ) when working with many files.
- Enable lazy loading (when available) for large datasets to reduce initial load time.
- Jump to specific timestamps with the time-entry field instead of scrolling.
2. Customize display for speed
- Set a sensible default montage and scaling so channels are readable without manual adjustments.
- Save and load screen layouts (channel order, scaling, font) to reuse across sessions.
- Use fewer visible channels by hiding irrelevant leads during review, then restore when needed.
3. Keyboard shortcuts and quick actions
- Zoom in/out with the dedicated zoom keys or Ctrl + mouse wheel for rapid inspection.
- Navigate between pages/epochs using PageUp/PageDown or arrow keys.
- Start/stop playback with the spacebar to quickly scan long recordings.
4. Efficient annotation and event handling
- Use single-key annotation labels (if configurable) to mark events quickly.
- Copy/paste annotations between similar segments to avoid repeated manual entry.
- Export annotations in standard formats (EDF+ events, CSV) to integrate with other tools.
5. Filtering and preprocessing shortcuts
- Apply real-time filters (bandpass/notch) to remove noise before detailed review.
- Create and save filter presets for different recording types (sleep, routine EEG, ICU).
- Use built-in artifact detection or quick manual marking to skip noisy sections.
6. Use conversion and batch tools
- Batch-convert files to other formats (e.g., EDF to CSV) when running automated analyses.
- Script common tasks with command-line options or external scripts to automate repetitive workflows.
7. Performance and stability
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