Electrical recordings of two freely-swimming weakly electric fish (Gymnotus sp.) in a large aquarium Tuma GuarientoRafael MosqueiroThiago MatiasPaulo CesarinoVinicius B AlmeidaLirio OB SlaetsJan FW MaiaLeonardo P PintoReynaldo D 2017 Please, cite: Guariento et al. Journal of Physiology-Paris (2017).<br>DOI: <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jphysparis.2017.02.001" target="doilink">10.1016/j.jphysparis.2017.02.001</a><br><br>In this dataset, we are sharing a time series of of electric pulses from dyads of freely moving Gymnotus sp. Because both fish are completely free to swim, <em>the challenge</em> is to detect which pulses were discharged by each of the fish. A rich repertoire of electrical behaviors can be observed, such as (i) <em>offs</em> (moments of silence) and (ii) <em>chirps</em> (small and noisy oscillations). This dataset was used in two of our most recent papers (see below).<br><br>For more information on this dataset and<b> an example of Python script that plots these time series</b>, <a href="https://github.com/neurobiofisica/gymnotools/tree/master/examples/Data%20from%20dominance%20contest%20of%20dyads%20of%20Gymnotus%20sp." rel="noopener" target="_blank">click here</a><b>.</b><br><br><br>Experiments with a single fish:<br>* Guariento_etal_2016_Training_Fish1.zip<b> - Unzipped:</b> 2,3G 15o04000.abf.memampf32<br>* Guariento_etal_2016_Training_Fish2.zip<b> - Unzipped:</b> 2,3G 15o04001.abf.memampf32<br><br>Two fish freely swimming in the same aquarium:<br>* Guariento_etal_2016_both_fish_interacting.zip<b> - Unzipped:</b> 7,9G 15o03000.abf.memampf32<br><br>