ABSTRACT
Mark Ylvisaker's death in 2009 marked the sad cessation of a prolific and rich discourse
regarding what matters in brain injury rehabilitation. In this article, I reflect
on how my own work has converged with and been influenced by this great thinker and
doer. My own work, like Ylvisaker's, has been oriented toward finding contextually
relevant ways of assessing and remediating communication and social impairments in
people with severe traumatic brain injury. In this article, common themes between
Ylvisaker's work and my own are explored, including the usefulness of pragmatic language
theory, which helps clarify why context is important when determining whether language
is appropriate or not, and also to help reveal where problems occur in the use of
subtle, diplomatic, or inferred meanings. This article also reflects upon Ylvisaker's
models for remediation and the extent to which these can be encompassed within (as
well as shape) more traditional models of social skills training.
KEYWORDS
Traumatic brain injury - communication - social skills - pragmatics - remediation
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Skye McDonaldPh.D. M.Sc.
Department of Clinical Neuropsychology, School of Psychology
University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia 2052
eMail: s.mcdonald@unsw.edu.au