The ten nearest neighbors to ScienceDaily span nine different subcategories — science podcasts, education, magazines, technology brands, authors, activists, journalists, and a comedian — with scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.90 to 0.92. That tight clustering with no standout is the defining structural feature here: no single neighbor dominates, and no other Website appears in the top 10.
The science and education cluster is the most coherent thread. TED Talks (0.92), NPR Science Desk (0.92), Scientific American (0.92), and Science Friday (0.91) all sit within a fraction of a point of each other — the closest four neighbors are effectively tied. March For Science (0.90) extends that cluster into civic science advocacy. But the remaining five neighbors pull in different directions: HubSpot (0.91) is a B2B technology brand, Tim Ferriss (0.91) is an author, Sarah Chadwick (0.90) is an activist, Daniel Dale (0.90) is a journalist, and Sarah Cooper (0.90) is a comedian. The cross-kind spread here is notable: an audience that overlaps with science media also overlaps, at nearly identical scores, with entities that have nothing thematically in common with science publishing.
The flat shape and the breadth of subcategories suggest an audience defined less by a single content niche than by a consistent underlying profile that maps onto many different kinds of entities at once.