The top 10 neighbors for Reuters Science News span five distinct subcategories — News Publishers, Magazines, Websites, Journalists, and Education — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. The scores across the top 10 compress into a narrow band: Guardian Science leads at 0.93, followed by Scientific American at 0.93 and Ars Technica at 0.92. Weijia Jiang, a journalist, sits at 0.92 — nearly identical to the science publications above her. TED Talks, classified under Education, comes in at 0.91, and Padma Lakshmi, a TV Personality, at 0.91. The range from first to tenth — 0.93 down to 0.90 — is less than four percentage points, which is the defining structural feature here.
The subcategory mix is notably cross-kind. Reuters Science News is a News Publisher, and only two of the top 10 neighbors share that subcategory: Guardian Science and, at the edge of the set, CNET News at 0.90. The remaining eight positions are held by a Magazine (Scientific American), a Website (Ars Technica), two Journalists (Weijia Jiang and Mehdi Hasan), an Education organization (TED Talks), a TV Personality (Padma Lakshmi), a Website (Upworthy), and another Website (Medium). The audience for Reuters Science News is shaped less by news publishing specifically than by a broader cluster of information-seeking, editorially-driven media consumption.
The flat shape signals an audience with no single dominant gravitational pull — one that distributes evenly across science media, long-form digital publishing, and credentialed journalism.