LGDec 3, 2025

Origin-Conditional Trajectory Encoding: Measuring Urban Configurational Asymmetries through Neural Decomposition

arXiv:2512.03755v1h-index: 2
Originality Highly original
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This provides urban planners, architects, and navigation system developers with quantitative tools for assessing experiential equity and cognitive impacts of urban layouts.

The paper tackles the problem of measuring directional asymmetries in urban navigation by developing a conditional trajectory encoder that jointly learns spatial and movement representations using geometric features, demonstrating that urban morphology creates systematic cognitive inequalities with validation on synthetic cities and Beijing's Xicheng District.

Urban analytics increasingly relies on AI-driven trajectory analysis, yet current approaches suffer from methodological fragmentation: trajectory learning captures movement patterns but ignores spatial context, while spatial embedding methods encode street networks but miss temporal dynamics. Three gaps persist: (1) lack of joint training that integrates spatial and temporal representations, (2) origin-agnostic treatment that ignores directional asymmetries in navigation ($A \to B \ne B \to A$), and (3) over-reliance on auxiliary data (POIs, imagery) rather than fundamental geometric properties of urban space. We introduce a conditional trajectory encoder that jointly learns spatial and movement representations while preserving origin-dependent asymmetries using geometric features. This framework decomposes urban navigation into shared cognitive patterns and origin-specific spatial narratives, enabling quantitative measurement of cognitive asymmetries across starting locations. Our bidirectional LSTM processes visibility ratio and curvature features conditioned on learnable origin embeddings, decomposing representations into shared urban patterns and origin-specific signatures through contrastive learning. Results from six synthetic cities and real-world validation on Beijing's Xicheng District demonstrate that urban morphology creates systematic cognitive inequalities. This provides urban planners quantitative tools for assessing experiential equity, offers architects insights into layout decisions' cognitive impacts, and enables origin-aware analytics for navigation systems.

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