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When looking at an NWB file, it can be helpful to see all of the TimeSeries objects and view how they align to each other. This is particularly helpful after applying temporal alignment procedures such as TTL pulse detection, to ensure that the resulting temporal offsets are reasonable. It can also be helpful when viewing datasets that contain many short TimeSeries, as is sometimes the case when recordings are stopped and started many times within a single session.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
@h-mayorquin is developing an interesting widget in NWB Widgets that might be valuable here as well: NeurodataWithoutBorders/nwbwidgets#302
When looking at an NWB file, it can be helpful to see all of the TimeSeries objects and view how they align to each other. This is particularly helpful after applying temporal alignment procedures such as TTL pulse detection, to ensure that the resulting temporal offsets are reasonable. It can also be helpful when viewing datasets that contain many short TimeSeries, as is sometimes the case when recordings are stopped and started many times within a single session.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: