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A tool for real-time syllable segmentation and classification of birdsong, designed to enable closed-loop experiments in vocal learning research.

Project description

Moove Logo

Moove

Moove (Marking Online using Only the Onsets of Vocal Elements) is a novel tool for real-time syllable segmentation and classification of birdsong, designed to enable closed-loop experiments in vocal learning research. Designed to study the learned vocalisations of Bengalese finches, Moove identifies target syllables in a bird's song and provides feedback in real time. Moove provides an out-of-the-box, neural network-based approach to reliably target vocal syllables before their end, enabling a reinforcement protocol where a specific syllable can be targeted with aversive white noise or an alternative feedback stimulus if adjusted.

Moove uses a two-stage architecture: a convolutional-based encoder that segments syllables in the audio signal and a CNN classifier that assigns each detected syllable segment a label, identifying its type based on the initial part of its structure. This design allows Moove to operate at a lower audio chunk duration than other tools, enabling faster and more accurate syllable recognition with minimal latency. Moove includes a GUI for creating training datasets using unsupervised methods and training the networks, as well as a recording script for real-time syllable targeting.

Installation

With pip (recommended)

To install Moove, use pip (Python 3.9 to including Python 3.12):

pip install moove

For a specific version:

pip install moove==1.0.3

After installing, a default configuration file (moove_config.ini) will be available at ~/.moove/. This configuration file should be adjusted to fit your experiment setup.

Note: If you encounter issues with the GUI not displaying correctly after installation, try using Python 3.11 with Tkinter installed. On macOS, you may need to install Python 3.11 separately (e.g., via Homebrew) and ensure Tkinter support is available.

With poetry

Alternatively, poetry can be used for development or as an alternative installation method:

poetry install

To run Moove with poetry:

poetry run moovegui
# or
poetry run moovetaf

This method is particularly useful if you encounter issues with the pip-installed version, as it runs the code directly from the source directory.

PortAudio Installation

Moove uses the sounddevice library, which depends on PortAudio. On most systems, PortAudio is already available or bundled. If needed, follow the steps below to install it:

Windows

PortAudio is typically preinstalled on Windows, so no additional installation is required. If you encounter issues, install the necessary audio drivers or check the PortAudio website: www.portaudio.com.

Linux

Install the PortAudio development library:

# Debian/Ubuntu
python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
sudo apt install python-dev-is-python3 gcc
sudo apt update && sudo apt install portaudio19-dev
sudo apt-get install python3-tk

then install the moove package

macOS

Use Homebrew to install PortAudio:

brew install portaudio

Enabling ASIO Support for Windows

ASIO provides the lowest latency, which is critical for Moove's real-time targeting capabilities. To enable ASIO support in sounddevice, replace the default PortAudio DLL with an ASIO-enabled version.

  • Locate the PortAudio DLL in your sounddevice installation. A common path is:
C:\Users\<YourUsername>\AppData\Roaming\Python\<YourPythonVersion>\site-packages\_sounddevice_data\portaudio_binaries\libportaudio64bit.dll
# oder
C:\Users\<YourUsername>\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\<YourPythonVersion>\Lib\site-packages\_sounddevice_data\portaudio_binaries\libportaudio64bit.dll
  • Backup the existing libportaudio64bit.dll and replace it with the ASIO-enabled DLL, renaming the libportaudio64bit-asio.dll to libportaudio64bit.dll.

Configuration

Default Configuration Location

By default, Moove stores its configuration file (moove_config.ini) in ~/.moove/. This configuration file should be adjusted to fit your experiment setup.

Custom Configuration Directory

To store the configuration in a different location, use the MOOVE_CONFIG_DIR environment variable:

Windows:

set MOOVE_CONFIG_DIR=D:\moove_config
moovegui

Linux/macOS:

export MOOVE_CONFIG_DIR="/path/to/config"
moovegui

Benefits: Enables different drives, network storage, project isolation, and multi-user setups.

Usage

Once installed, Moove offers two main entry points for operation:

  • moovegui: Opens the GUI for creating labeled datasets and training the segmentation and classification networks.

  • moovetaf: Starts the recording and targeting application, enabling real-time targeting of specific syllables.

To start, simply type moovegui or moovetaf in the terminal.

Alternative: If you installed Moove using poetry, you can run it with:

poetry run moovegui
# or
poetry run moovetaf

Requirements

  • Python Version: Python 3.9 to including Python 3.12
  • Numpy Version: Numpy < 2.0
  • Torch Version: Torch < 2.6
  • Audio Hardware: A microphone and speaker setup is required for online targeting experiments.

Troubleshooting

GUI not displaying correctly after pip install:

If the GUI window opens but appears empty (no plots visible), try the following:

  1. Use Python 3.11 with Tkinter: Install Python 3.11 separately and ensure Tkinter support is available:

    # macOS (using Homebrew)
    brew install python@3.11
    python3.11 -m pip install moove
    python3.11 -m moovegui
    
  2. Use Poetry instead: Poetry often resolves environment issues:

    poetry install
    poetry run moovegui
    
  3. Check Tkinter installation: Verify that Tkinter is properly installed:

    python3 -c "import tkinter; print('Tkinter is available')"
    

Workflow Overview

This section outlines the typical workflow for setting up Moove and conducting experiments:

  1. Baseline Recordings Begin with baseline recordings using MooveTaf to capture the bird's songs without targeting. In the configuration file (moove_config.ini), set realtime_classification to False for these recordings. Additionally, set dB_threshold for bout detection to define when a sequence starts and ends.

  2. Manual Segmentation In the MooveGUI, use the "ResegmentationWindow" to manually segment recorded songs and adjust the segmentation points as needed.

  3. Train the Segmentation Network With the segmentation data, open the "TrainingWindow" to train the segmentation network. Once the network is trained, return to the "ResegmentationWindow" to perform an automated re-segmentation on all data, ensuring consistency with segmentation results that would occur in real time.

  4. Label Creation Use the "ClusterWindow" in the GUI to label syllable segments. The clusters can be automatically labeled and then manually adjusted as needed.

  5. Train the Classification Network With the labeled syllables, use the "TrainingWindow" again to train the classification network based on the assigned labels.

  6. Real-Time Targeting Setup Finally, update the configuration file with the names of the trained segmentation and classification networks, set realtime_classification to True, and specify the target syllable for feedback. MooveTaf can now be used for conducting real-time targeting experiments, enabling precise, low-latency feedback during song production.

A detailed guide on how to use Moove can be downloaded directly from the repository.

Contact

For questions, issues, or feedback regarding Moove, please contact:

Primary contact:

Lena Veit: lena.veit@uni-tuebingen.de

Nils Riekers: nils@riekers.it

License

Moove is licensed under the MIT License. You are free to use, modify, and distribute the software, provided that you retain the copyright notice and give appropriate credit to the original authors.

See LICENSE for details.

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