A molecular phylogenetic analysis of the Octocorallia (Cnidaria: Anthozoa) based on mitochondrial protein-coding sequences

Multilingual Wikipedia

In June 2020 the work A molecular phylogenetic analysis of the Octocorallia (Cnidaria: Anthozoa) based on mitochondrial protein-coding sequences was on the 30,648th place in the ranking of the most reliable and popular publications with DOI number in multilingual Wikipedia from readers' point of view (PR-score). If we consider only frequency of appearance of this source in references of Wikipedia articles (F-score), this work was on the 37,671st place in June 2020. From Wikipedians' point of view, "A molecular phylogenetic analysis of the Octocorallia (Cnidaria: Anthozoa) based on mitochondrial protein-coding sequences" is the 5,711th most reliable publication with DOI number in different language versions of Wikipedia (AR-score).

PR-score:
30,648th place
74,811
-62,816
AR-score:
5,711th place
13,943
+38
F-score:
37,671st place
15
0

German Wikipedia (de)

PR-score:
3,110th place
37,676
-13,150
AR-score:
389th place
9,645
0
F-score:
1,810th place
8
0

Romanian Wikipedia (ro)

PR-score:
87th place
14,119
-41,401
AR-score:
59th place
1,920
0
F-score:
1,985th place
2
0

Spanish Wikipedia (es)

PR-score:
9,426th place
13,803
-4,298
AR-score:
12,683rd place
603
+5
F-score:
28,794th place
1
0

Japanese Wikipedia (ja)

PR-score:
18,496th place
3,355
+322
AR-score:
14,863rd place
211
0
F-score:
37,357th place
1
0

Macedonian Wikipedia (mk)

PR-score:
46th place
3,300
-4,100
AR-score:
60th place
950
0
F-score:
3,541st place
1
0

Hindi Wikipedia (hi)

PR-score:
127th place
2,400
-233
AR-score:
190th place
600
+34
F-score:
5,683rd place
1
0

Asturian Wikipedia (ast)

PR-score:
904th place
156
+44
AR-score:
4,324th place
14
0
F-score:
4,987th place
1
0

BestRef shows popularity and reliability scores for sources in references of Wikipedia articles in different languages. Data extraction based on complex method using Wikimedia dumps. To find the most popular and reliable sources we used information about over 200 million references of Wikipedia articles. More details...