Harvard University's top 10 nearest neighbors contain no other Education subcategory entities — the entire cluster is built from news publishers, magazines, websites, research organizations, and non-profits.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.97 down to 0.96 with no single dominant neighbor pulling away from the pack. MIT Technology Review leads at 0.97, followed closely by World Economic Forum at 0.97 and The Economist at 0.97. World Bank (0.97) and Foreign Affairs (0.97) round out the top five. The subcategory distribution across all ten is: four News Publishers (The Economist, Business Insider, Bloomberg Quicktake, and The Verge — though The Verge is subcategorized as a Website), two Magazines (MIT Technology Review, Foreign Affairs), two Websites (TechCrunch, The Verge), one Research Organization (World Economic Forum), and one Non-Profit (World Bank). The dominant thread is serious, globally-oriented media — financial and policy publications alongside tech-and-science outlets — paired with international institutional voices.
What's structurally absent from the top 10 is any other Education entity, any celebrity or influencer, and any consumer brand. The audience Harvard draws looks less like a university audience and more like the readership of premium global media and policy institutions.