Focused and minimalist term networks

Starting from a term entry, add related entries and gradually model specific ontologies that address a topic, product or process. This helps to keep your ontologies manageable and relevant.

Several ontologies for each termbase

A huge, global ontology that seeks to model the entire reality of an industry or a company is often unmanageable and does not promote understanding. 
In Lexeri, you can easily create several ontologies in which the same entry can play different roles.

Configurability for many use cases

Conventional, global ontologies can also be mapped in Lexeri – whatever you prefer. Individually defined relation types and freely definable labels as nodes can be used to model different ontology scenarios.

Comment on ontologies

Your team can comment on individual ontologies. This helps to clarify outstanding questions or expand your ontologies collaboratively.

Custom relation types

Relations between term entries can be very specific according to the described individual concept. Define your own relation types in Lexeri, including titles and different colors.
You can maintain bi- and unidirectional relation types: Simply enter a corresponding counter-relation for each relation type or connect two relation types.

Freely definable labels as elements

You can add freely definable labels in addition to term entries as nodes. This is an additional grouping option or upstream category that does not require definition as terminology in the termbase. You therefore have even greater flexibility in the creation of your ontology.

Neat and attractive design

You can design the look of your concept networks yourself: The nodes can be freely arranged and saved for all termbase users.
You can choose the level of detail you want to display for the relations between the entries and hide counter-relations.
Freely selectable colors for the relationship types help with visual differentiation and make your graphs attractive.

Learn more

Tutorials and start assistance

Would you like to create your own ontology or learn how to get started with Lexeri? You can find detailed instructions on ontologies in an article in our Help Center

Ontologies in the Help Center

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