Now that I've gotten around to actually making use of this, I've put my script up as a GitHub
gist.
When you have multiple basis functions (e.g. with -stim_times_AM2 or TENT or a multi-row GLT), the script produces pairwise histograms of p-values from each basis function. I'm still trying to figure out whether they're useful for anything, but they were just so darn easy...
It should work with Python 2.7+, but I've only tested it with 3.4; you'll also need to install numpy, pandas, matplotlib, seaborn and nibabel, but in the age of pip that's not so difficult (and most of those are probably already on your system anyway).
ijs
P.S.: Here's some sample output:
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 10/07/2015 03:44PM by Isaac Schwabacher.