The top 10 neighbors for Dr. Glaucomflecken span medical journals, public-radio podcasts, bestselling authors, research organizations, and a sports podcast — a mix that resists any single-category label.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.92 (JAMA) down to 0.88 (Men in Blazers) with no dominant spike. JAMA leads at 0.92, followed closely by Hidden Brain (0.90), Adam Grant (0.90), The BMJ (0.90), and Brené Brown (0.90). Subcategory tallies across the ten: three are Podcasts and Radio (Hidden Brain, Men in Blazers, NPR Science Desk), two are Magazines (JAMA, The BMJ), two are Authors (Adam Grant, Brené Brown), one is a Journalist (Kai Ryssdal), one is a fellow Professional (Eric Topol), and one is a Research Organization (NIH). The center entity's own subcategory — Professionals — appears once in the top 10 with Eric Topol at 0.89; the rest are drawn from media channels and author-class influencers rather than other professionals.
The cross-kind composition here — peer-reviewed medical publishing sitting alongside popular-psychology podcasts, public-radio journalists, and a soccer-culture show — points to an audience that moves fluidly between credentialed expertise and broadly curious, public-media consumption.