The top 10 neighbors for Mental Health NIMH span government agencies, political organizations, journalists, news publishers, a grocery chain, and a social media management tool — with no other Research Organizations appearing in the set.
The shape is flat: scores run from CDC Emergency at 0.88 down to American Cancer Society at 0.85, a band of just three points across ten neighbors. No single entity dominates. By subcategory, the mix is genuinely heterogeneous: Government (CDC Emergency), Political Groups (The Democrats), Technology (Hootsuite), TV Channels (PBS), Grocery and Superstores (Whole Foods Market), Journalists (Brooke Baldwin, Wolf Blitzer), Politicians (Cory Booker), Journalists again (Jacob Dean), and Non-Profit (American Cancer Society). The dominant subcategory pairing across the ten is Journalists and Politicians — five of the ten neighbors fall into one of those two subcategories — which places this research organization's audience squarely in the orbit of civic and political media consumers rather than a health or science-specific cluster.
The cross-kind character is the defining feature here: an audience that looks like it follows cable news anchors and Democratic politicians as readily as it follows a federal health institute, with no fellow Research Organization in the top 10 to anchor it to its own kind.