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ft_channelrepair.m
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ft_channelrepair.m
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function [data] = ft_channelrepair(cfg, data)
% FT_CHANNELREPAIR repairs bad or missing channels in the data by replacing
% them with the plain average of of all neighbours, by a weighted average
% of all neighbours, by an interpolation based on a surface Laplacian, or
% by spherical spline interpolating (see Perrin et al., 1989).
%
% Use as
% [interp] = ft_channelrepair(cfg, data)
% where the input data corresponds to the output from FT_PREPROCESSING.
%
% The configuration should contain
% cfg.method = 'weighted', 'average', 'spline', 'slap' or 'nan' (default = 'weighted')
% cfg.badchannel = cell-array, see FT_CHANNELSELECTION for details
% cfg.missingchannel = cell-array, see FT_CHANNELSELECTION for details
% cfg.neighbours = neighbourhood structure, see FT_PREPARE_NEIGHBOURS for details
% cfg.trials = 'all' or a selection given as a 1xN vector (default = 'all')
% cfg.lambda = regularisation parameter (default = 1e-5, for method 'spline' and 'slap')
% cfg.order = order of the polynomial interpolation (default = 4 for methods 'spline' and 'slap')
% cfg.senstype = string, which type of data to repair. Can be 'meg', 'eeg' or 'nirs' (default is automatic)
%
% The weighted neighbour approach cannot be used reliably to repair multiple
% bad channels that lie next to each other.
%
% If you want to reconstruct channels that are absent in your data, those
% channels may also be missing from the sensor definition (grad, elec or opto)
% and determining the neighbours is non-trivial. In that case you must use
% a complete sensor definition from another dataset or from a template.
%
% The EEG, MEG or NIRS sensor positions can be present as a field in the
% data (data.grad/data.elec/data.opto, depending on the type of data),
% or can be specified as cfg option. Either one is required for the following
% methods: 'weighted', 'spline', and 'slap'. Depending on the type of
% data this should be one of the following
% cfg.elec = structure with electrode positions or filename, see FT_READ_SENS
% cfg.grad = structure with gradiometer definition or filename, see FT_READ_SENS
% cfg.opto = structure with optode definition, see FT_READ_SENS
%
% This function will only repair one type of channels (MEG, EEG or NIRS) at
% a time. If you want to repair multiple types of channels, you should call
% it multiple times and use FT_SELECTDATA and FT_APPENDDATA.
%
% This function only interpolates data over space, not over time. If you want to
% interpolate using temporal information, e.g. using a segment of data before and
% after the nan-marked artifact, you should use FT_INTERPOLATENAN.
%
% To facilitate data-handling and distributed computing you can use
% cfg.inputfile = ...
% cfg.outputfile = ...
% If you specify one of these (or both) the input data will be read from a *.mat
% file on disk and/or the output data will be written to a *.mat file. These mat
% files should contain only a single variable, corresponding with the
% input/output structure.
%
% See also FT_MEGREALIGN, FT_MEGPLANAR, FT_PREPARE_NEIGHBOURS, FT_INTERPOLATENAN
% Copyright (C) 2004-2009, Robert Oostenveld
% Copyright (C) 2012-2013, Jörn M. Horschig, Jason Farquhar
% Copyright (C) 2021, Jan-Mathijs Schoffelen
% This file is part of FieldTrip, see http://www.fieldtriptoolbox.org
% for the documentation and details.
%
% FieldTrip is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
% it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
% the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
% (at your option) any later version.
%
% FieldTrip is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
% but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
% MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
% GNU General Public License for more details.
%
% You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
% along with FieldTrip. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
%
% $Id$
% these are used by the ft_preamble/ft_postamble function and scripts
ft_revision = '$Id$';
ft_nargin = nargin;
ft_nargout = nargout;
% do the general setup of the function
ft_defaults
ft_preamble init
ft_preamble debug
ft_preamble loadvar data
ft_preamble provenance data
% the ft_abort variable is set to true or false in ft_preamble_init
if ft_abort
return
end
% check if the input cfg is valid for this function
cfg = ft_checkconfig(cfg, 'forbidden', {'trial'}); % prevent accidental typos, see issue 1729
cfg = ft_checkconfig(cfg, 'renamedval', {'method', 'nearest', 'weighted'});
cfg = ft_checkconfig(cfg, 'renamed', {'elecfile', 'elec'});
cfg = ft_checkconfig(cfg, 'renamed', {'gradfile', 'grad'});
cfg = ft_checkconfig(cfg, 'renamed', {'optofile', 'opto'});
% set the default configuration
cfg.badchannel = ft_getopt(cfg, 'badchannel', {});
cfg.missingchannel = ft_getopt(cfg, 'missingchannel', {});
cfg.senstype = ft_getopt(cfg, 'senstype', []); % default is handled below
cfg.trials = ft_getopt(cfg, 'trials', 'all', 1);
cfg.method = ft_getopt(cfg, 'method', 'weighted');
cfg.lambda = ft_getopt(cfg, 'lambda', []); % subfunction will handle this
cfg.order = ft_getopt(cfg, 'order', []); % subfunction will handle this
% check if the input cfg is valid for this function
if ismember(cfg.method, {'weighted', 'average'})
cfg = ft_checkconfig(cfg, 'required', {'neighbours'});
end
cfg = ft_checkconfig(cfg, 'forbidden', 'layout');
% store the original datatype
dtype = ft_datatype(data);
% check if the input data is valid for this function
data = ft_checkdata(data, 'datatype', 'raw', 'feedback', 'yes');
% select trials of interest
tmpcfg = keepfields(cfg, {'trials', 'tolerance', 'showcallinfo', 'trackcallinfo', 'trackusage', 'trackdatainfo', 'trackmeminfo', 'tracktimeinfo', 'checksize'});
data = ft_selectdata(tmpcfg, data);
% restore the provenance information
[cfg, data] = rollback_provenance(cfg, data);
if isempty(cfg.badchannel)
% check if the first sample of the first trial contains NaNs; if so treat it as a bad channel
cfg.badchannel = ft_channelselection(find(isnan(data.trial{1}(:,1))), data.label);
if ~isempty(cfg.badchannel)
ft_info('detected channel %s as bad\n', cfg.badchannel{:});
end
end
needsens = true;
if ismember(cfg.method, {'nan', 'average'})
% a sensor description is not needed
needsens = false;
end
if needsens
% sometimes the data can have both gradiometers, electrodes and/or optodes
% but this function can only deal with one type of data at a time
if isempty(cfg.senstype)
% look at the bad channels, then at the data
if all(ft_chantype(cat(1, cfg.missingchannel(:), cfg.badchannel(:)), 'meg')) || ft_senstype(data, 'meg')
ft_notice('assuming that the data is MEG, use cfg.senstype to overrule this');
cfg.senstype = 'meg';
elseif all(ft_chantype(cat(1, cfg.missingchannel(:), cfg.badchannel(:)), 'eeg')) || ft_senstype(data, 'eeg')
ft_notice('assuming that the data is EEG, use cfg.senstype to overrule this');
cfg.senstype = 'eeg';
elseif all(ft_chantype(cat(1, cfg.missingchannel(:), cfg.badchannel(:)), 'nirs')) || ft_senstype(data, 'nirs')
ft_notice('assuming that the data is NIRS, use cfg.senstype to overrule this');
cfg.senstype = 'nirs';
else
% let FT_FETCH_SENS decide which sens to return
end
end
% the 3D spatial information of the channels is needed
% this will prefer sens from cfg over sens from data
sens = ft_fetch_sens(cfg, data);
% check if any of the channel positions contains NaNs; this happens when
% component data are backprojected to the sensor level
if any(isnan(sens.chanpos(:)))
ft_error('The channel positions contain NaNs; this prohibits correct behavior of the function. Please replace the input channel definition with one that contains valid channel positions');
end
% determine the global type of the data
iseeg = ft_senstype(sens, 'eeg');
ismeg = ft_senstype(sens, 'meg');
isnirs = ft_senstype(sens, 'opto');
% determine the detailled type, e.g. ctf151 or neuromag122
sensortype = ft_senstype(sens);
else
% determine the global type of the data
iseeg = ft_senstype(data, 'eeg');
ismeg = ft_senstype(data, 'meg');
isnirs = ft_senstype(data, 'opto');
% determine the detailled type, e.g. ctf151 or neuromag122
sensortype = ft_senstype(data);
end
if ismeg && ~any(strcmp(sensortype, {'ctf151', 'ctf275', 'bti148', 'bti248', 'babysquid74'}))
% MEG systems with only magnetometers or axial gradiometers are easy, planar systems are not
ft_warning('be careful when using "%s" - mixing of sensor types (e.g. magnetometers and gradiometers) can lead to wrong data. Check your neighbour-structure thoroughly', ft_senstype(sens));
end
if ~isempty(cfg.missingchannel) && strcmp(cfg.method, 'weighted')
ft_warning('Reconstructing missing channels using the weighted neighbour approach is not recommended!');
end
% get selection of channels that are missing and/or bad
cfg.missingchannel = cat(1, cfg.missingchannel(:), cfg.badchannel(:));
cfg.missingchannel = setdiff(cfg.missingchannel, data.label, 'stable');
cfg.badchannel = ft_channelselection(cfg.badchannel, data.label);
fprintf('There are %d bad channels\n', length(cfg.badchannel));
fprintf('There are %d missing channels\n', length(cfg.missingchannel));
% warn if weighted neighbour approach (see http://bugzilla.fieldtriptoolbox.org/show_bug.cgi?id=634)
if ~isempty(cfg.missingchannel) && strcmp(cfg.method, 'weighted')
ft_warning('Reconstructing missing channels using the weighted neighbour approach is not recommended!');
end
% store the realigned data in a new structure
interp = [];
interp.label = data.label;
interp.time = data.time;
switch cfg.method
case {'weighted' 'average'}
% first repair badchannels
if ~isempty(cfg.badchannel)
[dum, goodindx] = setdiff(data.label, cfg.badchannel, 'stable');
adj = channelconnectivity(cfg, data);
adj = adj(:, goodindx); % all chans x good chans
ntrials = length(data.trial);
nchans = length(data.label);
repair = eye(nchans, nchans);
badindx = match_str(data.label, cfg.badchannel);
unable = zeros(1,0);
for k = badindx(:)'
fprintf('repairing channel %s\n', data.label{k});
repair(k, k) = 0;
list = goodindx(adj(k, :));
% get bad channels out
[a, b] = setdiff(data.label(list), data.label(badindx));
b = sort(b); % undo automatical sorting by setdiff
list(~ismember(find(list), b)) = [];
distance = 1; % needed here, in case isempty(goodsensindx)
if strcmp(cfg.method, 'weighted')
% get corresponding ids for sens structure
[a, b] = match_str(sens.label, data.label(list));
goodsensindx = a(b);
if isempty(goodsensindx)
fprintf('\tcannot reconstruct channel - no neighbours in the original data or in the sensor positions\n');
unable = cat(2, unable, k);
else
[a, b] = match_str(sens.label, data.label(k));
badsensindx = a(b);
fprintf('\tusing neighbour %s\n', sens.label{goodsensindx});
distance = sqrt(sum((sens.chanpos(goodsensindx, :) - repmat(sens.chanpos(badsensindx, :), numel(goodsensindx), 1)).^2, 2));
end
end
repair(k, list) = (1./distance);
repair(k, list) = repair(k, list) ./ sum(repair(k, list));
end
% use sparse matrix to speed up computations
repair = sparse(repair);
% compute the missing data for each trial and set the ones that could not be reconstructed to nan
fprintf('\n');
fprintf('interpolating bad channels for %i trials %d', ntrials);
for k = 1:ntrials
fprintf('.');
interp.trial{k} = repair * data.trial{k};
interp.trial{k}(unable, :) = nan;
end
fprintf('\n');
else
fprintf('no bad channels to repair\n');
interp.trial = data.trial;
end
% deal with missingchannels next
if ~isempty(cfg.missingchannel)
fprintf('Interpolated missing channels will be concatenated.\n');
nchans = length(interp.label);
ntrials = length(interp.trial);
% interpolation missing channels
goodindx = 1:numel(data.label);
for chan = 1:numel(cfg.missingchannel)
interp.label{end+1} = cfg.missingchannel{chan};
% creating dummy trial data
for k = 1:ntrials
interp.trial{k}(end+1, :) = 0;
end
end
adj = channelconnectivity(cfg, interp);
adj = adj(:, goodindx); % all chans x good chans
repair = eye(nchans, nchans);
missingindx = match_str(interp.label, cfg.missingchannel);
unable = zeros(1,0);
for k = missingindx(:)'
fprintf('trying to reconstruct missing channel %s\n', interp.label{k});
repair(k, k) = 0;
list = goodindx(adj(k, :));
% get bad channels out
[a, b] = setdiff(data.label(list), interp.label(missingindx));
b = sort(b); % undo automatical sorting by setdiff
list(~ismember(find(list), b)) = [];
distance = 1; % needed here, in case isempty(goodsensindx)
if strcmp(cfg.method, 'weighted')
% get corresponding ids for sens structure
[a, b] = match_str(sens.label, interp.label(list));
goodsensindx = a(b);
if isempty(goodsensindx)
fprintf('\tcannot reconstruct channel - no neighbours in the original data or in the sensor positions\n');
unable = cat(2, unable, k);
else
[a, b] = match_str(sens.label, interp.label(k));
badsensindx = a(b);
fprintf('\tusing neighbour %s\n', sens.label{goodsensindx});
distance = sqrt(sum((sens.chanpos(goodsensindx, :) - repmat(sens.chanpos(badsensindx, :), numel(goodsensindx), 1)).^2, 2));
end
end
repair(k, list) = (1./distance);
repair(k, list) = repair(k, list) ./ sum(repair(k, list));
end
% use sparse matrix to speed up computations
repair = sparse(repair);
fprintf('\n');
% compute the missing data for each trial and set the ones that could not be reconstructed to nan
fprintf('\n');
fprintf('interpolating missing channel for %i trials %d', ntrials);
for k = 1:ntrials
fprintf('.');
interp.trial{k} = repair * interp.trial{k};
interp.trial{k}(unable, :) = nan;
end
fprintf('\n');
end
case {'spline' 'slap'}
if ~isempty(cfg.badchannel) || ~isempty(cfg.missingchannel)
fprintf('Spherical spline and surface Laplacian interpolation will treat bad and missing channels the same. Missing channels will be concatenated at the end of your data structure.\n');
end
% subselect only those sensors that are in the data or in badchannel or missingchannel
badchannels = union(cfg.badchannel, cfg.missingchannel);
sensidx = ismember(sens.label, union(data.label, badchannels));
label = sens.label(sensidx);
chanpos = sens.chanpos(sensidx, :);
try, chanori = sens.chanori(sensidx, :); end
try, chantype = sens.chantype(sensidx, :); end
try, chanunit = sens.chanunit(sensidx, :); end
fprintf('Checking spherical fit... ');
[c, r] = fitsphere(chanpos);
d = chanpos - repmat(c, numel(find(sensidx)), 1);
d = sqrt(sum(d.^2, 2));
d = mean(abs(d) / r);
if abs(d-1) > 0.1
ft_warning('bad spherical fit (residual: %.2f%%). The interpolation will be inaccurate.', 100*(d-1));
elseif abs(d-1) < 0.01
fprintf('perfect spherical fit (residual: %.1f%%)\n', 100*(d-1));
else
fprintf('good spherical fit (residual: %.1f%%)\n', 100*(d-1));
end
if strcmp(cfg.method, 'slap')
ft_warning('''slap'' method is not fully supported - be careful in interpreting your results');
end
% move missing channels to the end
missidx = find(ismember(label, cfg.missingchannel));
label(end+1:end+numel(missidx)) = label(missidx);
label(missidx) = [];
chanpos(end+1:end+numel(missidx), :) = chanpos(missidx, :);
chanpos(missidx, :) = [];
% select good channels only for interpolation
[goodchanlabels, goodindx] = setdiff(label, badchannels);
allchans = false;
if isempty(goodindx)
goodindx = 1:numel(label);
allchans = true;
ft_warning('No good channels found - interpolating based on all channels');
end
% undo automatical sorting by setdiff
goodindx = sort(goodindx);
% only take good channels that are in data (and remember how they are sorted)
[dataidx, sensidx] = match_str(data.label, label(goodindx));
% interpolate
fprintf('computing weight matrix...');
[pot,lap] = sphsplint(chanpos(goodindx(sensidx), :), chanpos, cfg.order, 500, cfg.lambda);
fprintf(' done!\n');
% Chooses the right output.
if strcmp(cfg.method, 'spline'), repair = pot;
else, repair = lap;
end
if ~allchans
% only use the rows corresponding to the channels that actually need interpolation
repair(goodindx(sensidx), :) = 0;
for k = 1:numel(sensidx)
i = strcmp(label(goodindx(sensidx(k))), label(goodindx(sensidx)));
repair(goodindx(sensidx(k)), i) = 1;
end
end % else all rows need to be interpolated
% compute the missing data for each trial and remove those could not be reconstructed
ntrials = length(data.trial);
fprintf('\n');
fprintf('interpolating channels for %i trials %d', ntrials);
for i=1:ntrials
fprintf('.');
interp.trial{i} = repair * data.trial{i}(dataidx, :);
end
fprintf('\n');
% update channels labels due to reordering
interp.label = label;
case 'nan'
% copy the original data over to the output data structure
interp.trial = data.trial;
if ~isempty(cfg.badchannel)
for k = 1:length(cfg.badchannel)
fprintf('inserting nan into bad channel %s\n', cfg.badchannel{k});
end
badindx = match_str(interp.label, cfg.badchannel);
for k = 1:numel(interp.trial)
interp.trial{k}(badindx, :) = nan;
end
end % bad channels
if ~isempty(cfg.missingchannel)
for k = 1:length(cfg.missingchannel)
fprintf('inserting nan into missing channel %s\n', cfg.missingchannel{k});
end
interp.label = cat(1, interp.label(:), cfg.missingchannel(:));
for k = 1:numel(interp.trial)
interp.trial{k} = cat(1, interp.trial{k}, nan(length(cfg.missingchannel), length(interp.time{k})));
end
end % missing channels
otherwise
ft_error('unknown method "%s" for interpolation', cfg.method);
end
% copy the additional fields over to the newly interpolated data
datafields = fieldnames(data);
interpfields = fieldnames(interp);
exfields = setdiff(datafields, interpfields);
for k = 1:length(exfields)
interp.(exfields{k}) = data.(exfields{k});
end
if needsens
% re-insert the sensor array
if iseeg
interp.elec = sens;
elseif ismeg
interp.grad = sens;
elseif isnirs
interp.opto = sens;
end
end
% convert back to input type if necessary
switch dtype
case 'timelock'
interp = ft_checkdata(interp, 'datatype', 'timelock');
otherwise
% keep the output as it is
end
% do the general cleanup and bookkeeping at the end of the function
ft_postamble debug
ft_postamble previous data
% rename the output variable to accomodate the savevar postamble
data = interp;
ft_postamble provenance data
ft_postamble history data
ft_postamble savevar data