“…The cerebellum is an ancient brain component traditionally relevant to the sensorimotor function and the coordination of movements. An asymmetric development of the cerebellar morphology has been reported in in primates such as humans (Phillips & Hopkins, 2007; Rosch, Ronan, Cherkas, & Gurd, 2010) and in carnivores such as dogs (Koyun, Aydinlioğlu, & Aslan, 2011) and ferrets (Sawada & Aoki, 2017; Sawada, Horiuchi‐Hirose, Saito, & Aoki, 2015) and is also associated with cerebellar functions, that is, emotion (Alves, Fukusima, & Aznar‐Casanova, 2008), cognition (Ashwell & Mai, 2012; Hu, Shen, & Zhou, 2008), and language (Hodge et al, 2010). Studies have reported that cerebellar asymmetry is altered in people with neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism (Hodge et al, 2010), schizophrenia (Levitt et al, 1999; Loeber, Cintron, & Yurgelun‐Todd, 2001; Luchins, Morihisa, Weinberger, & Wyatt, 1981; Sheng et al, 2013; Szeszko et al, 2003), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (Castellanos et al, 1996), dyslexia (Kibby, FancherJB, & Hynd, 2008), and specific language impairments (Hodge et al, 2010).…”