The top 10 neighbors for Amnesty International USA compress into a narrow band — similarities running from 0.99 down to 0.96 — with no single dominant pull and no sharp drop-off. The shape is flat: a dense cluster of organizations and international media, not a single defining anchor.
The two closest neighbors are fellow non-profits: Human Rights Watch at 0.99 and Amnesty International (the global body) at 0.98. Both share the same subcategory as the center entity, making them the most structurally similar audiences in the set. From there, the cluster broadens into international governance and global news: United Nations (0.98, Government) and Al Jazeera English (0.98, TV Channels) sit nearly level with the non-profit pair, followed by UNICEF (0.97, Non-Profit), UN Human Rights (0.97, Environmental), and UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency (0.97, Activism).
Rounding out the top 10 are World Food Programme (0.97, Non-Profit), TIME (0.96, Magazines), and Democracy Now! (0.96, Podcasts and Radio). The subcategory tally across all ten: five Non-Profit, one Government, one Activism, one Environmental, one TV Channel, one Magazines, one Podcasts and Radio. The majority are Organizations; the two Marketing Channels entries — TIME and Democracy Now! — represent the only departure from the international civil-society core.
What the flat shape reveals is an audience defined by a coherent institutional and global-news orientation, with no single entity pulling harder than the others.