Generating Origin-Destination Matrices in Neural Spatial Interaction Models Mark Girolami 1,2 Department of Engineering, Cambridge University, Cambridge, CB2 1PZ
–Neural Information Processing Systems
Agent-based models (ABMs) are proliferating as decision-making tools across policy areas in transportation, economics, and epidemiology. In these models, a central object of interest is the discrete origin-destination matrix which captures spatial interactions and agent trip counts between locations. Existing approaches resort to continuous approximations of this matrix and subsequent ad-hoc discretisations in order to perform ABM simulation and calibration. This impedes conditioning on partially observed summary statistics, fails to explore the multimodal matrix distribution over a discrete combinatorial support, and incurs discretisation errors. To address these challenges, we introduce a computationally efficient framework that scales linearly with the number of origin-destination pairs, operates directly on the discrete combinatorial space, and learns the agents' trip intensity through a neural differential equation that embeds spatial interactions. Our approach outperforms the prior art in terms of reconstruction error and ground truth matrix coverage, at a fraction of the computational cost. We demonstrate these benefits in large-scale spatial mobility ABMs in Cambridge, UK and Washington, DC, USA.
Neural Information Processing Systems
Jun-1-2025, 16:52:14 GMT
- Country:
- Europe > United Kingdom
- England > Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.70)
- North America > United States (1.00)
- Europe > United Kingdom
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.93)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine
- Epidemiology (0.66)
- Therapeutic Area (1.00)
- Information Technology (0.92)
- Health & Medicine
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