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Shared Near Infrared Spectroscopy Format (SNIRF) Specification

+ +

Table of Content

+ +

Introduction

+

The file format specification uses the extension .snirf. These are HDF5 format files, renamed with the .snirf extension. For a program to be “SNIRF-compliant”, it must be able to read and write the SNIRF file.

+

The development of the SNIRF specification is conducted in an open manner using the GitHub platform. To contribute or provide feedback visit https://github.com/fNIRS/snirf.

+

Data format

+

The HDF5 specifications are defined by the HDF5 group and found at https://www.hdfgroup.org. It is expected that HDF5 future versions will remain backwards compatibility in the foreseeable future.

+

The HDF5 format defines “groups” (H5G class) and “datasets” (H5D class) that are the two primary data organization and storage classes used in the SNIRF specification.

+

The structure of each data file has a minimum of required elements noted below.

+

For each element in the data structure, one of the 4 types is assigned, including

+ +

Datasets which are not arrays must be saved in scalar dataspaces. It is NOT VALID to save Datasets which are not specified as arrays in simple dataspaces with 1 dimension and with size 1. HDF5 interface implementations distinguish between these two formats and exhibit different behavior depending on the format of the file.

+

Valid arrays MUST:

+ +
+

For code samples in various programming languages which demonstrate the writing of SNIRF-specified formats, see the Appendix.

+
+

SNIRF file specification

+

The SNIRF data format must have the initial H5G group type /nirs at the initial file location.

+

All indices (source, detector, wavelength, datatype etc) start at 1.

+

All SNIRF data elements are associated with a unique HDF5 location path in the form of /root/parent/.../name. All paths must use /nirs or /nirs# (indexed group array).
+Note that the root /nirs can be either indexed or a non-indexed single entry.

+

If a data element is an HDF5 group and contains multiple sub-groups, it is referred to as an indexed group. Each element of the sub-group is uniquely identified by appending a string-formatted index (starting from 1, with no preceding zeros) in the name, for example, /.../name1 denotes the first sub-group of data element name, and /.../name2 denotes the 2nd element, and so on.

+

In the below sections, we use the notations "(i)" "(j)" or "(k)" inside the HDF5 location paths to denote the indices of sub-elements when multiplicity presents.

+

SNIRF data format summary

+

Note that this table serves as machine-readable schema for the SNIRF format. Its format may not be altered.

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SNIRF-formatted NIRS data structureMeaning of the dataType
/formatVersion                       * SNIRF format version               "s" * 
/nirs{i}                             * Root-group for 1 or more NIRS datasets   {i} *
     metaDataTags                     * Root-group for metadata headers            {.} * 
        SubjectID                    * Subject identifier        "s"  * 
        MeasurementDate              * Date of the measurement        "s"  * 
        MeasurementTime              * Time of the measurement        "s"  * 
        LengthUnit                  * Length unit (case sensitive)        "s"  * 
        TimeUnit                   * Time unit (case sensitive)        "s"  * 
        FrequencyUnit                * Frequency unit (case sensitive)        "s"  * 
         …                            * Additional user-defined metadata entries             
     data{i}                          * Root-group for 1 or more data blocks    {i} * 
        dataTimeSeries                * Time-varying signals from all channels[[<f>,...]]* 
        time                          * Time (in TimeUnit defined in metaDataTag)  [<f>,...] *
        offset                        * Absolute offset for all channels  [<f>,...] *
        measurementList{i}            * Per-channel source-detector information    {i} * 
            sourceIndex               * Source index for a given channel     <i>  * 
            detectorIndex             * Detector index for a given channel     <i>  * 
            wavelengthIndex           * Wavelength index for a given channel     <i>  * 
            wavelengthActual          * Actual wavelength for a given channel     <f>   
            wavelengthEmissionActual * Actual emission wavelength for a channel     <f>   
            dataType                  * Data type for a given channel     <i>  * 
            dataUnit                  * SI unit for a given channel     "s"   
            dataTypeLabel             * Data type name for a given channel     "s"    
            dataTypeIndex             * Data type index for a given channel     <i>  * 
            sourcePower               * Source power for a given channel     <f>   
            detectorGain              * Detector gain for a given channel     <f>   
        measurementLists            * source-detector information    {.} * 
            sourceIndex               * Source index for each channel   [<i>,...]* 
            detectorIndex             * Detector index for each channel   [<i>,...]* 
            wavelengthIndex           * Wavelength index for each channel   [<i>,...]* 
            wavelengthActual          * Actual wavelength for each channel   [<f>,...]
            wavelengthEmissionActual * Actual emission wavelength for each channel   [<f>,...]
            dataType                  * Data type for each channel   [<i>,...]* 
            dataUnit                  * SI unit for each channel   ["s",...]
            dataTypeLabel             * Data type name for each channel   ["s",...]
            dataTypeIndex             * Data type index for each channel   [<i>,...]* 
            sourcePower               * Source power for each channel   [<f>,...]  
            detectorGain              * Detector gain for each channel   [<f>,...]  
     stim{i}                          * Root-group for stimulus measurements       {i}    
         name                         * Name of the stimulus data       "s"  + 
         data                         * Data stream of the stimulus channel[[<f>,...]] +
         dataLabels                   * Names of additional columns of stim data  ["s",...]
     probe                            * Root group for NIRS probe information      {.} * 
         wavelengths                  * List of wavelengths (in nm)  [<f>,...] * 
         wavelengthsEmission          * List of emission wavelengths (in nm)[<f>,...]   
         sourcePos2D                  * Source 2-D positions in LengthUnit[[<f>,...]]
         sourcePos3D                  * Source 3-D positions in LengthUnit[[<f>,...]]
         detectorPos2D                * Detector 2-D positions in LengthUnit[[<f>,...]]
         detectorPos3D                * Detector 3-D positions in LengthUnit[[<f>,...]]
         frequencies                  * Modulation frequency list    [<f>,...]   
         timeDelays                   * Time delays for gated time-domain data  [<f>,...]   
         timeDelayWidths              * Time delay width for gated time-domain data  [<f>,...]   
         momentOrders                 * Moment orders of the moment TD data    [<f>,...]   
         correlationTimeDelays        * Time delays for DCS measurements     [<f>,...]   
         correlationTimeDelayWidths   * Time delay width for DCS measurements     [<f>,...]   
         sourceLabels                 * String arrays specifying source names        [["s",...]]
         detectorLabels               * String arrays specifying detector names      ["s",...]   
         landmarkPos2D                * Anatomical landmark 2-D positions[[<f>,...]]  
         landmarkPos3D                * Anatomical landmark 3-D positions[[<f>,...]]  
         landmarkLabels               * String arrays specifying landmark names      ["s",...]   
         coordinateSystem             * Coordinate system used in probe description   "s"   
         coordinateSystemDescription * Description of coordinate system       "s"   
     aux{i}                           * Root-group for auxiliary measurements      {i}    
         name                         * Name of the auxiliary channel       "s"  + 
         dataTimeSeries               * Data acquired from the auxiliary channel   [[<f>,...]] +
         dataUnit                     * SI unit of the auxiliary channel       "s"   
         time                         * Time (in TimeUnit) for auxiliary data   [<f>,...] + 
         timeOffset                   * Time offset of auxiliary channel data      [<f>,...]   
+

In the above schema table, the used notations are explained below: * {.} represents a simple HDF5 group * {i} represents an HDF5 group with one or multiple sub-groups (i.e. an indexed-group) * <i> represents an integer value * <f> represents a numeric value * "s" represents a string of arbitrary length * [...] represents a 1-D vector (dataset), can be empty * [[...]] represents a 2-D array (dataset), can be empty * ... (optional) additional elements similar to the previous element * * in the last column indicates a required subfield * *ⁿ in the last column indicates that at least one of the subfields in the subgroup identified by n is required * + in the last column indicates a required subfield if the optional parent object is included

+

SNIRF data container definitions

+

/formatVersion

+ +

This is a string that specifies the version of the file format. This document describes format version “1.0”

+

/nirs(i)

+ +

This group stores one set of NIRS data. This can be extended by adding the count number (e.g. /nirs1, /nirs2,…) to the group name. This is intended to allow the storage of 1 or more complete NIRS datasets inside a single SNIRF document. For example, a two-subject hyperscanning can be stored using the notation * /nirs1 = first subject’s data * /nirs2 = second subject’s data The use of a non-indexed (e.g. /nirs) entry is allowed when only one entry is present and is assumed to be entry 1.

+

/nirs(i)/metaDataTags

+ +

The metaDataTags group contains the metadata associated with the measurements. Each metadata record is represented as a dataset under this group - with the name of the record, i.e. the key, as the dataset’s name, and the value of the record as the actual data stored in the dataset. Each metadata record can potentially have different data types. Sub-groups should not be used to organize metadata records: a member of the metaDataTags Group must be a Dataset.

+

The below five metadata records are minimally required in a SNIRF file

+

/nirs(i)/metaDataTags/SubjectID

+ +

This record stores the string-valued ID of the study subject or experiment.

+

/nirs(i)/metaDataTags/MeasurementDate

+ +

This record stores the date of the measurement as a string. The format of the date string must either be "unknown", or follow the ISO 8601 date string format YYYY-MM-DD, where - YYYY is the 4-digit year - MM is the 2-digit month (padding zero if a single digit) - DD is the 2-digit date (padding zero if a single digit)

+

/nirs(i)/metaDataTags/MeasurementTime

+ +

This record stores the time of the measurement as a string. The format of the time string must either be "unknown" or follow the ISO 8601 time string format hh:mm:ss.sTZD, where - hh is the 2-digit hour - mm is the 2-digit minute - ss is the 2-digit second - .s is 1 or more digit representing a decimal fraction of a second (optional) - TZD is the time zone designator (Z or +hh:mm or -hh:mm)

+

/nirs(i)/metaDataTags/LengthUnit

+ +

This record stores the case-sensitive SI length unit used in this measurement. Sample length units include “mm”, “cm”, and “m”. A value of “um” is the same as “μm”, i.e. micrometer.

+

/nirs(i)/metaDataTags/TimeUnit

+ +

This record stores the case-sensitive SI time unit used in this measurement. Sample time units include “s”, and “ms”. A value of “us” is the same as “μs”, i.e. microsecond.

+

/nirs(i)/metaDataTags/FrequencyUnit

+ +

This record stores the case-sensitive SI frequency unit used in this measurement. Sample frequency units “Hz”, “MHz” and “GHz”. Please note that “mHz” is milli-Hz while “MHz” denotes “mega-Hz” according to SI unit system.

+

We do not limit the total number of metadata records in the metaDataTags. Users can add additional customized metadata records; no duplicated metadata record names are allowed.

+

Additional metadata record samples can be found in the below table.

+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Metadata Key NameMetadata value
ManufacturerName“Company Name”
Model“Model Name”
SubjectName“LastName, FirstName”
DateOfBirth“YYYY-MM-DD”
AcquisitionStartTime“1569465620”
StudyID“Infant Brain Development”
StudyDescription“In this study, we measure ….”
AccessionNumber“##########################”
InstanceNumber2
CalibrationFileName“phantomcal_121015.snirf”
UnixTime“1569465667”
+

The metadata records "StudyID" and "AccessionNumber" are unique strings that can be used to link the current dataset to a particular study and a particular procedure, respectively. The "StudyID" tag is similar to the DICOM tag “Study ID” (0020,0010) and "AccessionNumber" is similar to the DICOM tag “Accession Number”(0008,0050), as defined in the DICOM standard (ISO 12052).

+

The metadata record "InstanceNumber" is defined similarly to the DICOM tag “Instance Number” (0020,0013), and can be used as the sequence number to group multiple datasets into a larger dataset - for example, concatenating streamed data segments during a long measurement session.

+

The metadata record "UnixTime" defines the Unix Epoch Time, i.e. the total elapse time in seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z (UTC) minus the leap seconds.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)

+ +

This group stores one block of NIRS data. This can be extended adding the count number (e.g. data1, data2,…) to the group name. This is intended to allow the storage of 1 or more blocks of NIRS data from within the same /nirs entry * /nirs/data1 = data block 1 * /nirs/data2 = data block 2

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries

+ +

This is the actual raw or processed data variable. This variable has dimensions of <number of time points> x <number of channels>. Columns in dataTimeSeries are mapped to the measurement list (measurementList variable described below).

+

dataTimeSeries can be compressed using the HDF5 filter (using the built-in deflate filter or 3rd party filters such as 305-LZO or 307-bzip2

+

Chunked data is allowed to support real-time streaming of data in this array.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/dataOffset

+ +

This stores an optional offset value per channel, which, when added to /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries, results in absolute data values.

+

The length of this array is equal to the as represented by the second dimension in the dataTimeSeries.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/time

+ +

The time variable. This provides the acquisition time of the measurement relative to the time origin. This will usually be a straight line with slope equal to the acquisition frequency, but does not need to be equal spacing. For the special case of equal sample spacing an array of length <2> is allowed where the first entry is the start time and the second entry is the sample time spacing in TimeUnit specified in the metaDataTags. The default time unit is in second (“s”). For example, a time spacing of 0.2 (s) indicates a sampling rate of 5 Hz.

+ +

Chunked data is allowed to support real-time streaming of data in this array.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)

+ +

The measurement list. This variable serves to map the data array onto the probe geometry (sources and detectors), data type, and wavelength. This variable is an array structure that has the size <number of channels> that describes the corresponding column in the data matrix. For example, the measurementList3 describes the third column of the data matrix (i.e.  dataTimeSeries(:,3)).

+

Each element of the array is a structure which describes the measurement conditions for this data with the following fields:

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/sourceIndex

+ +

Index of the source.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/detectorIndex

+ +

Index of the detector.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/wavelengthIndex

+ +

Index of the “nominal” wavelength (in probe.wavelengths).

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/wavelengthActual

+ +

Actual (measured) wavelength in nm, if available, for the source in a given channel.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/wavelengthEmissionActual

+ +

Actual (measured) emission wavelength in nm, if available, for the source in a given channel.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/dataType

+ +

Data-type identifier. See Appendix for list possible values.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/dataUnit

+ +

International System of Units (SI units) identifier for the given channel. Encoding should follow the CMIXF-12 standard, avoiding special unicode symbols like U+03BC (μ) or U+00B5 (µ) and using ‘/’ rather than ‘per’ for units such as V/us. The recommended export format is in unscaled units such as V, s, Mole.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/dataTypeLabel

+ +

Data-type label. Only required if dataType is “processed” (99999). See Appendix for list of possible values.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/dataTypeIndex

+ +

Data-type specific parameter index. The data type index specifies additional data type specific parameters that are further elaborated by other fields in the probe structure, as detailed below. Note that where multiple parameters are required, the same index must be used into each (examples include data types such as Time Domain and Diffuse Correlation Spectroscopy). One use of this parameter is as a stimulus condition index when measurementList(k).dataType = 99999 (i.e, processed and measurementList(k).dataTypeLabel = 'HRF ...' .

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/sourcePower

+ +

The units are not defined, unless the user takes the option of using a metaDataTag as described below.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k)/detectorGain

+ +

Detector gain

+

For example, if measurementList5 is a structure with sourceIndex=2, detectorIndex=3, wavelengthIndex=1, dataType=1, dataTypeIndex=1 would imply that the data in the 5th column of the dataTimeSeries variable was measured with source #2 and detector #3 at wavelength #1. Wavelengths (in nanometers) are described in the probe.wavelengths variable (described later). The data type in this case is 1, implying that it was a continuous wave measurement. The complete list of currently supported data types is found in the Appendix. The data type index specifies additional data type specific parameters that are further elaborated by other fields in the probe structure, as detailed below. Note that the Time Domain and Diffuse Correlation Spectroscopy data types have two additional parameters and so the data type index must be a vector with 2 elements that index the additional parameters.

+

sourcePower provides the option for information about the source power for that channel to be saved along with the data. The units are not defined, unless the user takes the option of using a metaDataTag described below to define, for instance, sourcePowerUnit. detectorGain provides the option for information about the detector gain for that channel to be saved along with the data.

+

Note: The source indices generally refer to the optode naming (probe positions) and not necessarily the physical laser numbers on the instrument. The same is true for the detector indices. Each source optode would generally, but not necessarily, have 2 or more wavelengths (hence lasers) plugged into it in order to calculate deoxy- and oxy-hemoglobin concentrations. The data from these two wavelengths will be indexed by the same source, detector, and data type values, but have different wavelength indices. Using the same source index for lasers at the same location but with different wavelengths simplifies the bookkeeping for converting intensity measurements into concentration changes. As described below, optional variables probe.sourceLabels and probe.detectorLabels are provided for indicating the instrument specific label for sources and detectors.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists

+ +

The group for measurement list variables which map the data array onto the probe geometry (sources and detectors), data type, and wavelength. This group’s datasets are arrays with size <number of channels>, with each position describing the corresponding column in the data matrix. (i.e. the values at measurementLists/sourceIndex(3) and measurementLists/detectorIndex(3) correspond to dataTimeSeries(:,3)).

+

This group is required only if the indexed-group format /nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementList(k) is not used to encode the measurement list. measurementLists is an alternative that may offer better performance for larger probes.

+

The arrays of measurementLists are:

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/sourceIndex

+ +

Source indices for each channel. A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/detectorIndex

+ +

Detector indices for each channel. A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/wavelengthIndex

+ +

Index of the “nominal” wavelength (in probe.wavelengths) for each channel. A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/wavelengthActual

+ +

Actual (measured) wavelength in nm, if available, for the source in each channel. A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/wavelengthEmissionActual

+ +

Actual (measured) emission wavelength in nm, if available, for the source in each channel. A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/dataType

+ +

A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries. See Appendix for list of possible values.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/dataUnit

+ +

International System of Units (SI units) identifier for each channel. A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/dataTypeLabel

+ +

Data-type label. A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/dataTypeIndex

+ +

Data-type specific parameter indices. A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries. Note that the Time Domain and Diffuse Correlation Spectroscopy data types have two additional parameters and so dataTimeIndex must be a 2-D array with 2 columns that index the additional parameters.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/sourcePower

+ +

A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries. Units are optionally defined in metaDataTags.

+

/nirs(i)/data(j)/measurementLists/detectorGain

+ +

A 1-D array with length equal to the size of the second dimension of /nirs(i)/data(j)/dataTimeSeries. Units are optionally defined in metaDataTags.

+

/nirs(i)/stim(j)

+ +

This is an array describing any stimulus conditions. Each element of the array has the following required fields.

+

/nirs(i)/stim(j)/name

+ +

This is a string describing the jth stimulus condition.

+

/nirs(i)/stim(j)/data

+ +

This is a numeric 2-D array with at least 3 columns, specifying the stimulus time course for the jth condition. Each row corresponds to a specific stimulus trial. The first three columns indicate [starttime duration value].
+The starttime, in seconds, is the time relative to the time origin when the stimulus takes on a value; the duration is the time in seconds that the stimulus value continues, and value is the stimulus amplitude. The number of rows is not constrained. (see examples in the appendix).

+

Additional columns can be used to store user-specified data associated with each stimulus trial. An optional record /nirs(i)/stim(j)/dataLabels can be used to annotate the meanings of each data column.

+

/nirs(i)/stim(j)/dataLabels

+ +

This is a string array providing annotations for each data column in /nirs(i)/stim(j)/data. Each element of the array must be a string; the total length of this array must be the same as the column number of /nirs(i)/stim(j)/data, including the first 3 required columns.

+

/nirs(i)/probe

+ +

This is a structured variable that describes the probe (source-detector) geometry. This variable has a number of required fields.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/wavelengths

+ +

This field describes the “nominal” wavelengths used (in nm unit). This is indexed by the wavelengthIndex of the measurementList variable. For example, probe.wavelengths = [690, 780, 830]; implies that the measurements were taken at three wavelengths (690 nm, 780 nm, and 830 nm). The wavelength index of measurementList(k).wavelengthIndex variable refers to this field. measurementList(k).wavelengthIndex = 2 means the kth measurement was at 780 nm.

+

Please note that this field stores the “nominal” wavelengths. If the precise (measured) wavelengths differ from the nominal wavelengths, one can store those in the measurementList.wavelengthActual field in a per-channel fashion.

+

The number of wavelengths is not limited (except that at least two are needed to calculate the two forms of hemoglobin). Each source-detector pair would generally have measurements at all wavelengths.

+

This field must present, but can be empty, for example, in the case that the stored data are processed data (dataType=99999, see Appendix).

+

/nirs(i)/probe/wavelengthsEmission

+ +

This field is required only for fluorescence data types, and describes the “nominal” emission wavelengths used (in nm unit). The indexing of this variable is the same wavelength index in measurementList used for probe.wavelengths such that the excitation wavelength is paired with this emission wavelength for a given measurement.

+

Please note that this field stores the “nominal” emission wavelengths. If the precise (measured) emission wavelengths differ from the nominal ones, one can store those in the measurementList.wavelengthEmissionActual field in a per-channel fashion.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/sourcePos2D

+ +

This field describes the position (in LengthUnit units) of each source optode. The positions are coordinates in a flattened 2D probe layout. This field has size <number of sources> x 2. For example, probe.sourcePos2D(1,:) = [1.4 1], and LengthUnit='cm' places source number 1 at x=1.4 cm and y=1 cm.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/sourcePos3D

+ +

This field describes the position (in LengthUnit units) of each source optode in 3D. This field has size <number of sources> x 3.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/detectorPos2D

+ +

Same as probe.sourcePos2D, but describing the detector positions in a flattened 2D probe layout.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/detectorPos3D

+ +

This field describes the position (in LengthUnit units) of each detector optode in 3D, defined similarly to sourcePos3D.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/frequencies

+ +

This field describes the frequencies used (in FrequencyUnit units) for frequency domain measurements. This field is only required for frequency domain data types, and is indexed by measurementList(k).dataTypeIndex.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/timeDelays

+ +

This field describes the time delays (in TimeUnit units) used for gated time domain measurements. This field is only required for gated time domain data types, and is indexed by measurementList(k).dataTypeIndex. The indexing of this field is paired with the indexing of probe.timeDelayWidths.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/timeDelayWidths

+ +

This field describes the time delay widths (in TimeUnit units) used for gated time domain measurements. This field is only required for gated time domain data types, and is indexed by measurementList(k).dataTypeIndex. The indexing of this field is paired with the indexing of probe.timeDelays.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/momentOrders

+ +

This field describes the moment orders of the temporal point spread function (TPSF) or the distribution of time-of-flight (DTOF) for moment time domain measurements. This field is only required for moment time domain data types, and is indexed by measurementList(k).dataTypeIndex.
+Note that the numeric value in this array is the exponent in the integral used for calculating the moments. For detailed/specific definitions of moments, see Wabnitz et al, 2020; for general definitions of moments see here.

+

In brief, given a TPSF or DTOF N(t) (photon counts vs. photon arrival time at the detector):
+momentOrder = 0: total counts: N_total = \intergral N(t)dt
+momentOrder = 1: mean time of flight: m = <t> = (1/N_total) \integral t N(t) dt
+momentOrder = 2: variance/second central moment: V = (1/N_total) \integral (t - <t>)^2 N(t) dt
+Please note that all moments (for orders >=1) are expected to be normalized by the total counts (i.e. n=0); Additionally all moments (for orders >= 2) are expected to be centralized.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/correlationTimeDelays

+ +

This field describes the time delays (in TimeUnit units) used for diffuse correlation spectroscopy measurements. This field is only required for diffuse correlation spectroscopy data types, and is indexed by measurementList(k).dataTypeIndex. The indexing of this field is paired with the indexing of probe.correlationTimeDelayWidths.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/correlationTimeDelayWidths

+ +

This field describes the time delay widths (in TimeUnit units) used for diffuse correlation spectroscopy measurements. This field is only required for gated time domain data types, and is indexed by measurementList(k).dataTypeIndex. The indexing of this field is paired with the indexing of probe.correlationTimeDelays.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/sourceLabels

+ +

This is a string array providing user friendly or instrument specific labels for each source. Each element of the array must be a unique string among both probe.sourceLabels and probe.detectorLabels.This can be of size <number of sources>x 1 or <number of sources> x <number of wavelengths>. This is indexed by measurementList(k).sourceIndex and measurementList(k).wavelengthIndex.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/detectorLabels

+ +

This is a string array providing user friendly or instrument specific labels for each detector. Each element of the array must be a unique string among both probe.sourceLabels and probe.detectorLabels. This is indexed by measurementList(k).detectorIndex.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/landmarkPos2D

+ +

This is a 2-D array storing the neurological landmark positions projected along the 2-D (flattened) probe plane in order to map optical data from the flattened optode positions to brain anatomy. This array should contain a minimum of 2 columns, representing the x and y coordinates (in LengthUnit units) of the 2-D projected landmark positions. If a 3rd column presents, it stores the index to the labels of the given landmark. Label names are stored in the probe.landmarkLabels subfield. An label index of 0 refers to an undefined landmark.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/landmarkPos3D

+ +

This is a 2-D array storing the neurological landmark positions measurement from 3-D digitization and tracking systems to facilitate the registration and mapping of optical data to brain anatomy. This array should contain a minimum of 3 columns, representing the x, y and z coordinates (in LengthUnit units) of the digitized landmark positions. If a 4th column presents, it stores the index to the labels of the given landmark. Label names are stored in the probe.landmarkLabels subfield. An label index of 0 refers to an undefined landmark.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/landmarkLabels(j)

+ +

This string array stores the names of the landmarks. The first string denotes the name of the landmarks with an index of 1 in the 4th column of probe.landmark, and so on. One can adopt the commonly used 10-20 landmark names, such as “Nasion”, “Inion”, “Cz” etc, or use user-defined landmark labels. The landmark label can also use the unique source and detector labels defined in probe.sourceLabels and probe.detectorLabels, respectively, to associate the given landmark to a specific source or detector. All strings are ASCII encoded char arrays.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/coordinateSystem

+ +

Defines the coordinate system for sensor positions. The string must be one of the coordinate systems listed in the BIDS specification (Appendix VII) such as “MNI152NLin2009bAsym”, “CapTrak” or “Other”. If the value “Other” is specified, then a defition of the coordinate system must be provided in /nirs(i)/probe/coordinateSystemDescription. See the FieldTrip toolbox web page for detailed descriptions of different coordinate systems.

+

/nirs(i)/probe/coordinateSystemDescription

+ +

Free-form text description of the coordinate system. May also include a link to a documentation page or paper describing the system in greater detail. This field is required if the coordinateSystem field is set to “Other”.

+

/nirs(i)/aux(j)

+ +

This optional array specifies any recorded auxiliary data. Each element of aux has the following required fields:

+

/nirs(i)/aux(j)/name

+ +

This is string describing the jth auxiliary data timecourse. While auxiliary data can be given any title, standard names for commonly used auxiliary channels (i.e. accelerometer data) are specified in the appendix.

+

/nirs(i)/aux(j)/dataTimeSeries

+ +

This is the aux data variable. This variable has dimensions of <number of time points> x <number of channels>. If multiple channels of related data are generated by a system, they may be encoded in the multiple columns of the time series (i.e. complex numbers). For example, a system containing more than one accelerometer may output this data as a set of ACCEL_X/ACCEL_Y/ACCEL_Z auxiliary time series, where each has the dimension of <number of time points> x <number of accelerometers>. Note that it is NOT recommended to encode the various accelerometer dimensions as multiple channels of the same aux Group: instead follow the "ACCEL_X", "ACCEL_Y", "ACCEL_Z" naming conventions described in the appendix. Chunked data is allowed to support real-time data streaming.

+

/nirs(i)/aux(j)/dataUnit

+ +

International System of Units (SI units) identifier for the given channel. Encoding should follow the CMIXF-12 standard, avoiding special unicode symbols like U+03BC (μ) or U+00B5 (µ) and using ‘/’ rather than ‘per’ for units such as V/us. The recommended export format is in unscaled units such as V, s, Mole.

+

/nirs(i)/aux(j)/time

+ +

The time variable. This provides the acquisition time (in TimeUnit units) of the aux measurement relative to the time origin. This will usually be a straight line with slope equal to the acquisition frequency, but does not need to be equal spacing. The size of this variable is <number of time points> or <2> similar to definition of the /nirs(i)/data(j)/time field.

+

Chunked data is allowed to support real-time data streaming

+

/nirs(i)/aux(j)/timeOffset

+ +

This variable specifies the offset of the file time origin relative to absolute (clock) time in TimeUnit units.

+

Appendix

+

Supported measurementList(k).dataType values in dataTimeSeries

+ +

Supported measurementList(k).dataTypeLabel values in dataTimeSeries

+ ++++ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Tag NameMeanings
“dOD”Change in optical density
“dMean”Change in mean time-of-flight
“dVar”Change in variance (2nd central moment)
“dSkew”Change in skewness (3rd central moment)
“mua”Absorption coefficient
“musp”Scattering coefficient
“HbO”Oxygenated hemoglobin (oxyhemoglobin) concentration
“HbR”Deoxygenated hemoglobin (deoxyhemoglobin) concentration
“HbT”Total hemoglobin concentration
“H2O”Water content
“Lipid”Lipid concentration
“StO2”Tissue oxygen saturation
“BFi”Blood flow index
“HRF dOD”Hemodynamic response function for change in optical density
“HRF dMean”HRF for change in mean time-of-flight
“HRF dVar”HRF for change in variance (2nd central moment)
“HRF dSkew”HRF for change in skewness (3rd central moment)
“HRF HbO”Hemodynamic response function for oxyhemoglobin concentration
“HRF HbR”Hemodynamic response function for deoxyhemoglobin concentration
“HRF HbT”Hemodynamic response function for total hemoglobin concentration
“HRF BFi”Hemodynamic response function for blood flow index
+

Supported /nirs(i)/aux(j)/name values

+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Tag NameMeanings
“ACCEL_X”Accelerometer data, first axis of orientation
“ACCEL_Y”Accelerometer data, second axis of orientation
“ACCEL_Z”Accelerometer data, third axis of orientation
“GYRO_X”Gyrometer data, first axis of orientation
“GYRO_Y”Gyrometer data, second axis of orientation
“GYRO_Z”Gyrometer data, third axis of orientation
“MAGN_X”Magnetometer data, first axis of orientation
“MAGN_Y”Magnetometer data, second axis of orientation
“MAGN_Z”Magnetometer data, third axis of orientation
+

Examples of stimulus waveforms

+

Assume there are 10 time points, starting at zero, spaced 0.1s apart. If we assume a stimulus to be a 0.2 second off, 0.2 second on repeating block, it would be specified as follows:

+
  [0.2 0.2 1.0]
+  [0.6 0.2 1.0]
+

Code samples

+

The following code demonstrates how to use the Python h5py and numpy libraries and the MATLAB H5ML.hdf5lib2 “low-level” interface to write specified SNIRF datatypes to disk as HDF5 Datasets of the proper format.

+

String "s"

+

MATLAB

+
fid = H5F.open(<SNIRF file path>, 'H5F_ACC_RDWR', 'H5P_DEFAULT')
+sid = H5S.create('H5S_SCALAR')
+tid = H5T.copy('H5T_C_S1');
+H5T.set_size(tid, 'H5T_VARIABLE');
+did = H5D.create(fid, <dataset location>, tid, sid, 'H5P_DEFAULT')
+H5D.write(did, tid, 'H5S_ALL', 'H5S_ALL', 'H5P_DEFAULT', <value of string>)
+

Python

+
file = h5py.File(<SNIRF file path>, 'r+')
+varlen_str_dtype = h5py.string_dtype(encoding='ascii', length=None)
+file.create_dataset(<dataset location>, dtype=varlen_str_dtype, data=<value of string>)
+

numeric <f>

+

MATLAB

+
fid = H5F.open(<SNIRF file path>, 'H5F_ACC_RDWR', 'H5P_DEFAULT')
+tid = H5T.copy('H5T_NATIVE_DOUBLE')
+sid = H5S.create('H5S_SCALAR')
+H5D.create(fid, <dataset location>, tid, sid, 'H5P_DEFAULT')
+h5write(<SNIRF file path>, <dataset location>, <value of numeric>)
+

Python

+
file = h5py.File(<SNIRF file path>, 'r+')
+file.create_dataset(<dataset location>, dtype='f8', data=<value of numeric>)
+

integer <i>

+

MATLAB

+
fid = H5F.open(<SNIRF file path>, 'H5F_ACC_RDWR', 'H5P_DEFAULT')
+tid = H5T.copy('H5T_NATIVE_INT')
+sid = H5S.create('H5S_SCALAR')
+H5D.create(fid, <dataset location>, tid, sid, 'H5P_DEFAULT')
+h5write(<SNIRF file path>, <dataset location>, <value of integer>)
+

Python

+
file = h5py.File(<SNIRF file path>, 'r+')
+file.create_dataset(<dataset location>, dtype='i4', data=<value of integer>)
+

string array ["s",...]

+

MATLAB

+
fid = H5F.open(<SNIRF file path>, 'H5F_ACC_RDWR', 'H5P_DEFAULT')
+
+str_arr = {'Hello', 'World', 'foo', 'bar'}  % values to write, a cell array of strings of any length
+
+sid = H5S.create_simple(1, numel(str_arr), H5ML.get_constant_value('H5S_UNLIMITED'));
+
+tid = H5T.copy('H5T_C_S1');
+H5T.set_size(tid, 'H5T_VARIABLE');
+
+pid = H5P.create('H5P_DATASET_CREATE');
+H5P.set_chunk(pid, 2);
+
+did = H5D.create(fid, <dataset location>, tid, sid, pid)
+
+H5D.write(did, tid, 'H5S_ALL', 'H5S_ALL', 'H5P_DEFAULT', str_arr)
+

Python

+
array = numpy.array(<list of strings>).astype('O')  # A list of strings must be converted to a NumPy list with dtype 'O'
+file = h5py.File(<SNIRF file path>, 'r+')
+varlen_str_dtype = h5py.string_dtype(encoding='ascii', length=None)
+file.create_dataset(<dataset location>, dtype=varlen_str_dtype, data=array)
+

numeric array [<f>,...] or [[<f>,...]]

+

MATLAB > Note: Because MATLAB has no notion of arrays with fewer than 2 dimensions, using size(data) as the 3rd argument of h5create will erroneously save arrays with 1 dimension as a row or column vector of 2 dimensions. In the 1D case, use length(data) as the 3rd argument of h5create.

+
data = <numeric array>
+h5create(<SNIRF file path>, <dataset location>, length(data) / size(data), 'Datatype', 'double')
+h5write(<SNIRF file path>, <dataset location>, data)
+

Python

+
array = numpy.array(<numeric array>).astype(numpy.float64)  # A list or nested list of values should be converted to a NumPy array
+file = h5py.File(<SNIRF file path>, 'r+')
+file.create_dataset(<dataset location>, dtype='f8', data=array)
+

integer array [<i>,...] or [[<i>,...]]

+

MATLAB > Note: Because MATLAB has no notion of arrays with fewer than 2 dimensions, using size(data) as the 3rd argument of h5create will erroneously save arrays with 1 dimension as a row or column vector of 2 dimensions. In the 1D case, use length(data) as the 3rd argument of h5create.

+
data = <integer array>
+h5create(<SNIRF file path>, <integer array dataset location>, length(data) / size(data), 'Datatype', 'int32')
+h5write(<SNIRF file path>, <integer array dataset location>, data)
+

Python

+
array = numpy.array(<integer array>).astype(int)  # A list or nested list of values should be converted to a NumPy array
+file = h5py.File(<SNIRF file path>, 'r+')
+file.create_dataset(<integer array dataset location>, dtype='i4', data=array)
+

Acknowledgement

+

This document was originally drafted by Blaise Frederic (bbfrederick at mclean.harvard.edu) and David Boas (dboas at bu.edu).

+

Other significant contributors to this specification include: - Theodore Huppert (huppert1 at pitt.edu) - Jay Dubb (jdubb at bu.edu) - Qianqian Fang (q.fang at neu.edu)

+

The following individuals representing academic, industrial, software, and hardware interests are also contributing to and supporting the adoption of this specification:

+

Software

+ +

Hardware

+