What the study found
The paper identifies high-end luxury retail, specifically flagship stores of Italian and European fashion houses, as a second optimal entry point for the dual-layer civilization, alongside the unreachable concert. It argues that the luxury flagship store experience is desired by many people but is structurally unreachable because of geography, economics, and psychological friction.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors suggest that spatial computing may remove all three friction sources at once while preserving the spatial and sensory core of the luxury experience. The study says this makes luxury retail uniquely suitable for dual-layer implementation because, unlike a concert where the performance is the content, the store's space itself is the content.
What the researchers tested
The paper presents a conceptual argument using the framework V=N/D. It compares high-end luxury flagship stores with the unreachable concert and discusses how spatial computing might change access to these experiences.
What worked and what didn't
According to the abstract, the framework treats luxury flagship stores as desired by millions but unreachable in practice because of geography, economics, and psychological friction. The paper states that spatial computing could eliminate these barriers while preserving the experience's spatial and sensory core.
What to keep in mind
The available summary does not describe empirical testing, sample size, or measured outcomes. No limitations beyond the structural barriers named in the abstract are provided.
Key points
- The paper identifies luxury flagship stores as a second optimal entry point for the dual-layer civilization.
- It says the flagship-store experience is desired by many people but unreachable because of geography, economics, and psychological friction.
- The authors argue that spatial computing could remove those three barriers while preserving the spatial and sensory core of the experience.
- The paper contrasts luxury retail with concerts by stating that, for stores, the space itself is the content.
- The abstract presents a conceptual argument rather than empirical testing.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Luxury flagship stores identified as a second entry point
- Authors:
- Yoshimitsu Katayama
- Institutions:
- Bukhara State University
- Publication date:
- 2026-05-14
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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