These are the sources referred to inline or in shortened form on this website.
[in progress]
Baumbach 1987: Baumbach, Lydia. “Names of Shepherds at Knossos.” Acta Classica XXX (1987), pp. 5-10.
Davis & Valério 2020: Davis and Valério, “Names and Designations of People in Linear A: A Contextual Study of Tablets HT 85 and 117.” B. Davis and R. Laffineur (eds), Neôteros. Studies in Bronze Age Aegean Art and Archaeology in Honor of Professor John G. Younger. Peeters: 2020. Pp. 23-31.
Facchetti 1996: Facchetti, Giulio M. “Comparable Name-Lists in Linear A.” Kadmos Bd. 35. Walter de Gruyter, 1996. Pp. 100-104.
Hajnal 2018: Hajnal, Ivo. “Graeco-Anatolian contacts in the Mycenaean period“
Meissner 2019: Meissner, Torsten. “Greek or Minoan? Names and Naming Habits in the Aegean Bronze Age“
Negri 2001: Negri, Mario, “Onomastica Minoica: I Nomi in -A-Re.” SMEA 43/1 (2001), pp. 75-91.
Peruzzi 1959: E. Peruzzi (1959) “Recent Interpretations of Minoan (Linear A),” WORD, 15:2, 313-324, DOI: 10.1080/00437956.1959.11659701
Salgarella 2022: Salgarella, Ester. “Cracking the Cretan code.” https://aeon.co/essays/without-a-rosetta-stone-can-linguists-decipher-minoan-script
Steele & Meissner 2017: Steele, Philippa M. and Meissner, Torsten. “From Linear B to Linear A: The problem of the backward projection of sound values.”
Thompson 2003: “Special vs. Normal Mycenaean Revisited.” Minos 37-38, 2002-2003, pp. 337-369.
Uchitel 2016: Uchitel, Alexander. “Ships and shipment in Minoan Linear A.” Minos 39, 2016, pp. 9-16.
van Soesbergen 2022: van Soesbergen, Peter George. The Decipherment of Minoan Linear A: Hurrians and Hurrian in Minoan Crete. Volume I, Part IV.
I do not use van Soesbergen’s proposed etymologies, but his analyses of what is and is not a personal name are useful.