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Original Articles

Overprotection, “speaking for”, and conversational participation: A study of couples with aphasiaFootnote

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Pages 327-336 | Published online: 24 Feb 2007

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (18)

Esther Jolliff & Lynette Tope. (2024) Group intervention for acquired writing disorders in aphasia. Aphasiology 38:2, pages 366-388.
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Christine L. Williams, David Newman & Bandana Neupane Poudel. (2021) When an Aging Spouse Has Dementia: Impact of a Home-Based Intervention on Marital Communication. Issues in Mental Health Nursing 42:10, pages 960-966.
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Carole Anglade, Guylaine Le Dorze & Claire Croteau. (2021) How clerks understand the requests of people living with aphasia in service encounters. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 35:1, pages 84-99.
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Sophie Eleanor Brown, Marian C. Brady, Linda Worrall & Lesley Scobbie. (2021) A narrative review of communication accessibility for people with aphasia and implications for multi-disciplinary goal setting after stroke. Aphasiology 35:1, pages 1-32.
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Jamie H. Azios & Brent Archer. (2018) Singing behaviour in a client with traumatic brain injury: a conversation analysis investigation. Aphasiology 32:8, pages 944-966.
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Renee Fabus, Elaine Sands, Carolyn Springer & Kaitlin Dondorf. (2016) The relationship between perceptions of caregiving and carer contributions in an interview situation with a partner with aphasia. Aphasiology 30:9, pages 1026-1038.
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Deborah Hersh, Erin Godecke, Elizabeth Armstrong, Natalie Ciccone & Julie Bernhardt. (2016) “Ward talk”: Nurses’ interaction with people with and without aphasia in the very early period poststroke. Aphasiology 30:5, pages 609-628.
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Karen M. McLellan, Clare M. McCann, Linda E. Worrall & Matire L. N. Harwood. (2014) “For Māori, language is precious. And without it we are a bit lost”: Māori experiences of aphasia. Aphasiology 28:4, pages 453-470.
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Shelley Tregea & Kyla Brown. (2013) What makes a successful peer-led aphasia support group?. Aphasiology 27:5, pages 581-598.
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Elizabeth Armstrong, Deborah Hersh, Colleen Hayward, Joan Fraser & Melita Brown. (2012) Living with aphasia: Three Indigenous Australian stories. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 14:3, pages 271-280.
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Elizabeth Armstrong, Natalie Ciccone, Erin Godecke & Betty Kok. (2011) Monologues and dialogues in aphasia: Some initial comparisons. Aphasiology 25:11, pages 1347-1371.
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Alex Gillespie, Joan Murphy & Morag Place. (2010) Divergences of perspective between people with aphasia and their family caregivers. Aphasiology 24:12, pages 1559-1575.
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Alison Ferguson & Ashlee Harper. (2010) Contributions to the talk of individuals with aphasia in multiparty interactions. Aphasiology 24:12, pages 1605-1620.
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BarbaraA. Purves. (2009) The complexities of speaking for another. Aphasiology 23:7-8, pages 914-925.
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Claire Croteau, Guylaine Le Dorze & Claudia Morin. (2008) The influence of aphasia severity on how both members of a couple participate in an interview situation. Aphasiology 22:7-8, pages 802-812.
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Claire Croteau, Guylaine Le Dorze & Geneviève Baril. (2007) Development of a procedure to evaluate the contributions of persons with aphasia and their spouses in an interview situation . Aphasiology 21:6-8, pages 791-801.
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Articles from other publishers (24)

Courtney C. Jewell & Stacy M. Harnish. (2024) Safety-Seeking Behaviors and Anxiety Maintenance in People With Aphasia: A Viewpoint. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, pages 1-6.
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Courtney C. Jewell, Stacy M. Harnish, Jennifer Brello, Alyssa M. Lanzi & Matthew L. Cohen. (2024) Poststroke Communication Ability Predicts Patient–Informant Discrepancies in Reported Activities and Participation. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, pages 1-14.
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Lars-Christer Hydén, Anna Ekström & Ali Reza Majlesi. (2024) ‘Proto-conversation’ as a practice in late-stage dementia care. Pragmatics and Society 15:1, pages 178-195.
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Kirstine Shrubsole, Emma Power & Marie‐Christine Hallé. (2022) Communication partner training with familiar partners of people with aphasia: A systematic review and synthesis of barriers and facilitators to implementation. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 58:2, pages 601-628.
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Carole Anglade, Michel Tousignant & Isabelle Gaboury. (2022) Rigorous Qualitative Research Involving Data Collected Remotely From People With Communication Disorders: Experience From a Telerehabilitation Trial. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair 36:8, pages 557-564.
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Marion C. Leaman & Brent Archer. (2022) “If You Just Stay With Me and Wait…You'll Get an Idea of What I'm Saying”: The Communicative Benefits of Time for Conversational Self-Repair for People With Aphasia. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 31:3, pages 1264-1283.
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Marion C. Leaman, Brent Archer & Lisa A. Edmonds. (2022) Toward Empowering Conversational Agency in Aphasia: Understanding Mechanisms of Topic Initiation in People With and Without Aphasia. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 31:1, pages 322-341.
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Claire Croteau, Paméla McMahon‐Morin, Guylaine Le Dorze & Geneviève Baril. (2020) Impact of aphasia on communication in couples. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 55:4, pages 547-557.
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Marjorie Nicholas, Lindsay Jennelle, Lisa Tabor Connor, Charles Haynes & Lauryn Zipse. (2020) Do caregiver proxy reports and congruence of client–proxy activity participation goals relate to quality of life in people with aphasia?. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 55:3, pages 373-386.
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Jamie H. Azios & Jack S. Damico. (2020) Clinical Practice Recommendations for Improving Life Participation for People With Aphasia in Long-Term Care. Perspectives of the ASHA Special Interest Groups 5:2, pages 384-396.
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Brent Archer, Jamie H. Azios & Samantha Moody. (2019) Humour in clinical–educational interactions between graduate student clinicians and people with aphasia. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 54:4, pages 580-595.
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Ashley P. Duggan. 2019. Health and Illness in Close Relationships. Health and Illness in Close Relationships.
Alex Gillespie & Julie Hald. (2017) The paradox of helping: Contradictory effects of scaffolding people with aphasia to communicate. PLOS ONE 12:8, pages e0180708.
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Michelle M. Haddad, Edward Taub, Gitendra Uswatte, Margaret L. Johnson, Victor W. Mark, Ameen Barghi, Ezekiel Byrom, Xiaohua Zhou & Christina M. Rodriguez. (2017) Assessing the Amount of Spontaneous Real-World Spoken Language in Aphasia: Validation of Two Methods. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 26:2, pages 316-326.
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Marie-Pierre de Partz. 2016. Traité de neuropsychologie clinique de l'adulte. Traité de neuropsychologie clinique de l'adulte 241 265 .
Friedemann Pulvermüller, Bettina Mohr & Edward Taub. 2016. Neurobiology of Language. Neurobiology of Language 1025 1034 .
Ineke Wilssens, Dorien Vandenborre, Kim van Dun, Jo Verhoeven, Evy Visch-Brink & Peter Mariën. (2015) Constraint-Induced Aphasia Therapy Versus Intensive Semantic Treatment in Fluent Aphasia. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 24:2, pages 281-294.
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Marie‐Christine Hallé, Guylaine Le Dorze & Anne Mingant. (2014) Speech–language therapists’ process of including significant others in aphasia rehabilitation. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 49:6, pages 748-760.
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Helen Moore & Alex Gillespie. (2014) The caregiving bind: Concealing the demands of informal care can undermine the caregiving identity. Social Science & Medicine 116, pages 102-109.
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Edward Taub, Gitendra Uswatte & Victor W. Mark. (2014) The functional significance of cortical reorganization and the parallel development of CI therapy. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
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Margaret L. Johnson, Edward Taub, Leslie H. Harper, Jamie T. Wade, Mary H. Bowman, Staci Bishop-McKay, Michelle M. Haddad, Victor W. Mark & Gitendra Uswatte. (2014) An Enhanced Protocol for Constraint-Induced Aphasia Therapy II: A Case Series. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 23:1, pages 60-72.
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Alex Gillespie, Tom Reader, Flora Cornish & Catherine Campbell. (2013) Beyond ideal speech situations: Adapting to communication asymmetries in health care. Journal of Health Psychology 19:1, pages 72-78.
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Georgia PomakiAnita DeLongis, Tanya Anagnostopoulou & Jayme Heininger. (2011) Can’t Live with You, Can’t Live without You: Negative Family Exchanges and Adaptation in End-stage Renal Disease Patients. Journal of Health Psychology 16:3, pages 520-529.
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Marie-Christine HalléFabie Duhamel & Guylaine Le Dorze. (2010) The Daughter–Mother Relationship in the Presence of Aphasia: How Daughters View Changes Over the First Year Poststroke. Qualitative Health Research 21:4, pages 549-562.
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