Yes, that’s right.
Springer Nature and Taylor & Francis (DR 92 for their sites), top academic publishers, publish their journal articles online with the following particular feature: Each article’s page contains the entire reference list of the paper, with dofollow hyperlinks, for either open-access or paid-access articles.
How can you have your link there in a natural way in gambling context?
As a gambling researcher, I publish my research once or twice a year in gambling-studies journals in the portfolio of those two publishers. An article on your website can be cited in the references list of a forthcoming research article of mine. Your article will have a topic suggested by me (to match the research) and will be authored by someone from your staff with my contribution. The link to your article remains permanent on that academic publisher’s site.
There is additional value added to your link: The journal article’s page is backlinked automatically from Pubmed, a .gov site (ncbi.nim.nih.gov, DR 94). I also backlink the journal page from my profile pages on semanticscholar.org (DR 90), orcid.org (DR 91), and several high-authority science repositories (most of them DR 90+).
You may see a concrete example here https://link.springer.com/article/10...99-018-09820-1 . Check the reference list of that article and you will see two links to our website probability.infarom.ro.
As for a proof of the SEO performance of such a link, I would just mention that a Google search on the keywords “blackjack mathematics?and “lottery mathematics? the topics of those two pages cited in my example, returns our webpages on #3 and #2 respectively (just after Wikipedia); besides, the DR of our site increased with 12 points from the time of the publication, with no other SEO and content effort.
Participation comes with other benefits included: A free one year presence in our GamMathQA program (with links in several DR 90+ science repositories; it is detailed in another thread in this subforum), one free expert article for your site, and featuring your site as a partner on the scientific sites that we own.
There are maximum three spots available for a journal article. You should know that the timeframe of academic publication is relatively large ?usually between 3 and 12 months from the submission, depending on the requested revisions.
Those interested in such academic journal links can PM me directly for specific questions. I will also post more detailed info in this thread as I receive your questions and evaluate the overall interest.
You may also post in the thread your questions about how the program works technically.