Abstract

Due to the high robustness to artifacts, steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) has been widely applied to construct high-speed brain-computer interfaces (BCIs). Thus far, many spatial filtering methods have been proposed to enhance the target identification performance for SSVEP-based BCIs, and task-related component analysis (TRCA) is among the most effective ones. In this paper, we further extend TRCA and propose a new method called Latency Aligning TRCA (LA-TRCA), which aligns visual latencies on channels to obtain accurate phase information from task-related signals. Based on the SSVEP wave propagation theory, SSVEP spreads from posterior occipital areas over the cortex with a fixed phase velocity. Via estimation of the phase velocity using phase shifts of channels, the visual latencies on different channels can be determined for inter-channel alignment. TRCA is then applied to aligned data epochs for target recognition. For the validation purpose, the classification performance comparison between the proposed LA-TRCA and TRCA-based expansions were performed on two different SSVEP datasets. The experimental results illustrated that the proposed LA-TRCA method outperformed the other TRCA-based expansions, which thus demonstrated the effectiveness of the proposed approach for enhancing the SSVEP detection performance.

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