At 0.90, Hyperloop is the strongest pull in Neuralink's top 10 — and right behind it, The Boring Company sits at 0.90 as well, forming a clear two-peak structure where both neighbors are essentially tied at the top before the field drops away.
The shape here is two-peak, with Hyperloop (0.90) and The Boring Company (0.90) as the twin anchors. Both are Technology brands, matching Neuralink's own subcategory — so the very top of the neighbor set is same-kind. The third neighbor, Lex Fridman (0.87), breaks that pattern: he's classified as an Academic under Celebrities and Influencers, not a Technology brand. From there, OpenAI (0.85) returns to Technology, and Jeff Bezos (0.84) enters as a Professional. The surprise in the top 10 is Alaska Airlines (0.83), an Airlines brand with no obvious thematic connection to brain-computer interfaces — its presence signals that audience shape and subject matter are genuinely independent. Rounding out the set are The Spectator Index (0.83), a News Publisher, and Cathie Wood (0.83) and Casey Neistat (0.83), a Professional and a TV Personality respectively. Vitalik Buterin (0.82) closes the top 10 as a Tech Personality. Tallying subcategories: four Technology brands, two Professionals, one Academic, one Airlines brand, one News Publisher, one TV Personality, and one Tech Personality — a genuinely mixed set outside the two dominant peaks.
The two-peak structure, anchored by fellow Technology brands at the very top but dissolving quickly into academics, media figures, and an airline, suggests an audience that is tech-oriented at its core but unusually broad in the adjacent spaces it occupies.