“…As Twining had anticipated, 1 the development of cognitive agents (Tecuci et al, 2016) has renewed interest in Wigmore's chart method, since, by providing a structure for the ordering of reasoning, the method helped prepare the ground for its automation by software (Bex et al, 2003; Vignaux and Robertson, 1992). Building on this, it has been proposed that human users could be assisted in the creation of an evidence diagram by means of an algorithm aiming at semi-automatically transforming an evidence list into a Wigmore chart (Chalamish et al, 2013). Similarly, several software packages have been developed to assist in the visualisation of argumentation schemes, Araucaria (Reed and Rowe, 2004, 2007), Carneades (Gordon, 2007; Gordon et al, 2007), ArguMed (Verheij, 2005) and Rationale (van Gelder, 2007) being the best known.…”