Books, Monographs, Chapters, and Manuals
Damico, J.S.,
Simmons, N.N., & Schweitzer, L.A. (1995). Addressing the
Third Law of Gardening: Methodological Alternatives in Aphasiology.
In M. Lemme (Ed.) Clinical Aphasiology Conference Proceedings,
23. (pp. 83-93). San Diego, CA: Singular Press.
Simmons, N.N.
& Damico, J.S. (1995). Communicative Competence in Aphasia:
Evidence from Compensatory Strategies. In M. Lemme (Ed.) Clinical
Aphasiology Conference Proceedings, 23. (pp. 95-105) San
Diego, CA:
Singular Press.
Damico, J.S.
& Simmons-Mackie, N.N. (1998). Function, flexibility, and
face in conversation. In L. Pyenson (Ed.), Word and Icon, Saying
and Seeing. (Pp. 40-49). Lafayette, LA: The Center for Louisiana
Studies:
Simmons-Mackie,
N.N. & Damico, J.S. (1999). Social role negotiation in
aphasia therapy: Competence, incompetence, and conflict. In
J. Duchan,
D. Kovarsky, & M. Maxwell (Eds.) Studies in normal and pathological
discourse. New York: Erlbaum Press.
Oelschlaeger,
M. & Damico, J.S. (In press). Word searches in aphasia: A
study of the collaborative responses of communicative partners. In
C.
Goodwin (Ed.), The social life of aphasia. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
Reviews and Other Selected Publications
Damico, J.S.
(1982). The hard and soft of neurolinguistics: A tutorial.
New Mexico TESOL's Selected Proceedings.
Manuscripts in Progress
Maintaining impairment in
aphasia therapy: The co-construction of deficit via
talk-in-interaction.
An investigation of therapeutic
control in aphasia therapy.
Re-establishing communication
through optimal augmentation: An ethnographic study.
Spouse interactions in aphasia:
Evidence for communicative collusion.