Presentation (software)


title: "Presentation (software)" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["neuroscience-software", "medical-software", "behavioral-experimentation-software"] topic_path: "science/biology" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presentation_(software)" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox Software"]

FieldValue
namePresentation
captionPresentation
developerNeurobehavioral Systems
latest_release_version21.1
latest_release_date
operating_systemMicrosoft Windows 9x/XP/Vista/7/8
genreIDE
licenseProprietary
website
::

|name= Presentation |caption = Presentation |developer = Neurobehavioral Systems |latest_release_version = 21.1 |latest_release_date = |operating_system = Microsoft Windows 9x/XP/Vista/7/8 |genre = IDE |license = Proprietary |website = Presentation is a Windows software application for conducting psychological and neurobehavioral experiments, developed by Neurobehavioral Systems Inc. and first released in 2003. It supports auditory and visual stimuli creation and delivery, records responses from nearly any input device and allows control of parallel port, serial port, TCP/IP and Ni-DAQ for communication to and from fMRI devices, response devices, eye trackers and brain imaging equipment. It also supports Microsoft Kinect for Windows. It is temporally accurate to less than a millisecond. Presentation has over 10,000 users{{cite web | author = Neurobehavioral Systems | title = over 10,000 users | url = http://www.neurobs.com}} worldwide. Presentation supports Unicode via the utf-8 specification.

Users

Presentation is used in universities and their experiments all over the world, such as

  • Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging{{cite web | author = Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging | title = Stimuli presentation | url = http://www.ru.nl/neuroimaging/facilities/stimuli_presentation/}}
  • Perception, memory and aesthetics of indeterminate art{{cite web | author = Alumit Ishai & Scott L. Fairhall, University of Zurich, Switzerland. Robert Pepperell, University of Wales Institute, Cardiff, UK. | title = Perception, memory and aesthetics of indeterminate art | url = http://repository.uwic.ac.uk/dspace/bitstream/10369/799/4/Perception%20memory%20aesthetics.pdf}}
  • Common ground for spatial cognition? A behavioral and fMRI study of sex differences in mental rotation and spatial working memory{{cite web |author1=Sarah L. Levin |author2=Feroze B. Mohamed |author3=Steven M. Platek | title = Common ground for spatial cognition? A behavioral and fMRI study... | url = http://www.epjournal.net/filestore/ep03227254.pdf| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090105221011/http://www.epjournal.net/filestore/ep03227254.pdf| url-status = usurped| archive-date = January 5, 2009}}
  • Contagious yawning and the brain{{cite web |author1=Steven M. Platek |author2=Feroze B. Mohamed |author3=Gordon G. Gallup Jr. | title = Contagious yawning and the brain | url = http://www.baillement.com/replication/platek_contagious.brain.pdf}}
  • Stereoscopic Depth and the Occlusion Illusion{{cite web | author = Stephen E. Palmer and Karen B. Schloss, University of California, Berkeley | title = Stereoscopic Depth and the Occlusion Illusion | url = http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~plab/pdf/Palmer&Schloss.OcclusionIllusion.pdf}}
  • Neural mechanisms underlying auditory feedback control of speech{{cite web | author = Jason A. Tourville1, Kevin J. Reilly, Frank H. Guenther | title = Neural mechanisms underlying auditory feedback control of speech | url = http://cns-web.bu.edu/~guenther/APE_NeuroImage_PrePrint.pdf}}
  • An Interdisciplinary Study of Visual Indeterminacy{{cite web |author1=Robert Pepperell |author2=Alumit Ishai | title = An Interdisciplinary Study of Visual Indeterminacy | url = http://www.theassc.org/files/assc/Oxford_Poster3.pdf}}

Programming

Presentation uses two proprietary scripting languages to describe and control experiments. It also has a Python module allowing the use of Python to control experiments.

SDL (Scenario Description Language)

SDL is a simple language used to describe the stimuli and trials which make up an experiment. Compile-time logic can be used to generate and/or randomize stimuli.

PCL (Program Control Language)

PCL is a fully functioning scripting language based loosely on C and Basic. It uses strong type checking to ensure that the intention of the programmer is explicit. Loops, "if" statements and subroutines are supported. It can be used in conjunction with the objects created in SDL, or used alone to create, manipulate and present stimuli. The editor supports code completion.

Python

Presentation has a Python module which allows users to use Python instead of PCL to script their experiments. Anything that can be done in PCL can also be done in Python.

References

References

  1. Neurobehavioral Systems. "Presentation Scenarios".
  2. Neurobehavioral Systems. "PCL Programs".
  3. Neurobehavioral Systems. "Python in Presentation".

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neuroscience-softwaremedical-softwarebehavioral-experimentation-software