A statement of the stationary phase method I know is the following. Suppose $\phi(x_0) = \phi'(x_0) = 0$ and $\phi''(x_0) \not = 0$. If $\psi$ is a smooth function supported in a sufficiently small neighborhood of $x_0$, then $$ \int_{\mathbb{R}} e^{i \lambda \phi(x)} \psi(x) dx \sim a_0 \lambda^{-1/2} $$ for some $a_0 \in \mathbb{C}$.
Suppose $\psi(x) = 0$ for $x> x_0 + \varepsilon$ and $x < x_0 - \varepsilon$ where $\varepsilon>0$ is sufficiently small. I was just wondering does the method still work if $\psi$ satisfies this condition but also $\psi(x) = 0$ for $x \in I$ where $I$ is an open interval $x_0 \in I$ and $I \subseteq (x_0 - \varepsilon, x_0 + \varepsilon)$? So in this case we can not say that $\psi$ is supported in a sufficiently small neighbourhood of $x_0$ as in the statement above. However, $\psi$ is $0$ outside $[x_0 - \varepsilon, x_0 + \varepsilon]$. I was wondering is this still enough to obtain the above result for some $a_0$? Any comments are appreciated. Thank you very much.