The provided HTML snippet appears to be part of a scientific article's metadata, specifically the bibliographic information section. Here's a breakdown of what each section does:
* The first paragraph is the abstract or summary of the article.
* The "Cite this article" section provides various options for readers to cite or reference the article in their own work.
+ The citation itself includes the title of the article, the publication name (Nature), and a DOI link.
+ There are three download citations with icons:
- A PDF icon that allows readers to download the full article as a PDF file.
- A medium format icon that allows readers to save a medium-sized image of the article.
- A link-like icon that copies the shareable link to the reader's clipboard.
* The publication history section lists when the article was received, accepted, and published. It also includes the issue date and a DOI link for each publication step.
* The "Share this article" section allows readers to share the article with others through social media or email. There are two options:
+ A button that generates a shareable link, which can be copied into an email or text message.
+ An option that adds the article to a sharedIt collection.
Note that the `data-component` attributes and other HTML elements are likely used for accessibility purposes and may not be present in all versions of the HTML code.
* The first paragraph is the abstract or summary of the article.
* The "Cite this article" section provides various options for readers to cite or reference the article in their own work.
+ The citation itself includes the title of the article, the publication name (Nature), and a DOI link.
+ There are three download citations with icons:
- A PDF icon that allows readers to download the full article as a PDF file.
- A medium format icon that allows readers to save a medium-sized image of the article.
- A link-like icon that copies the shareable link to the reader's clipboard.
* The publication history section lists when the article was received, accepted, and published. It also includes the issue date and a DOI link for each publication step.
* The "Share this article" section allows readers to share the article with others through social media or email. There are two options:
+ A button that generates a shareable link, which can be copied into an email or text message.
+ An option that adds the article to a sharedIt collection.
Note that the `data-component` attributes and other HTML elements are likely used for accessibility purposes and may not be present in all versions of the HTML code.