1. Bell P. (1997). Using argument representations to make thinking visible for individuals and groups. Paper presented at the Second International Conference on Computer Support for Collaborative Learning, Toronto.
2. Blasi G. L. (1995). What lawyers know: Lawyering expertise, cognitive science, and the functions of theory. Journal of Legal Education, 45(3), 313–97.
3. Buckingham Shum S. (1996). Design argumentation as design rationale. The Encyclopedia of Computer Science and Technology, 35(20), 95–128.
4. Buckingham Shum S., & Hammond Nick. (1994). Argumentation-based design rationale: What use at what cost? International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 40(4), 603–652.
5. Buckingham Shum S. J., MacLean A., Bellotti V. M. E., & Hammond N. V. (1997). Graphical argumentation and design cognition. Human-Computer Interaction, 12(3), 1997, 267–300.