Your brain is a graph. Your documents are not. Graphex transforms linear text into interactive knowledge networks—so understanding emerges from structure, not struggle.
Human memory operates as a semantic network—a biological graph where understanding emerges from connections. But information still arrives in lines: paragraph after paragraph, page after page.
This mismatch creates cognitive friction: the mental effort of transforming sequential text into the networked models your brain actually needs.
"The learner must expend substantial mental energy decoding linear strings into the networked mental models required for deep understanding."
Beautiful whiteboards for organizing what you already know. But they assume you've done the hard work of reading and extracting. The "Blank Canvas Problem": you must manually build every node.
Instant graphs from text. Impressive demos, but optimized for analysis dashboards—not for reading and learning. No source anchoring. No pedagogical loop.
An Active Graph Reader. Not a whiteboard. Not a dashboard. A reading environment that scaffolds comprehension by externalizing the structure your brain needs to build.
Click a node to see its source. Click a link to understand why two concepts connect.
Upload any document. Our AI extracts entities, arguments, and relationships—transforming linear text into an interactive knowledge structure. Not keywords. Not summaries. Structure.
Every edge tells a story. Click any connection to see why two concepts relate, backed by source text and AI analysis. Understanding emerges from relationships, not isolated facts.
Reading one paper is easy. Synthesizing five is hard. Graphex merges knowledge graphs across documents—revealing where sources agree, conflict, and connect.
Graphex is in active development. Join the waitlist to be among the first to transform how you read.