“…Furthermore, the rapid development of neuroimaging technologies – i.e., event-related potential (ERP), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), etc., – has made it possible to depict the relative contribution of bilingual experience to the brain and mind ( Kroll, 2015 ; García-Pentón et al, 2016 ). Using those new techniques, emerging studies have found some general frameworks for the bilingual effect on neural architecture from the perspectives of both functional reorganization ( Abutalebi and Green, 2007 ; Arredondo et al, 2019b ; Li et al, 2019 ) and structural restructuration, such as gray matter density ( Mechelli et al, 2004 ), white matter integrity ( Mohades et al, 2015 ), and cortical thickness ( Klein et al, 2014 ). Thus, neuroplasticity in the bilingual brain should not come as a surprise, given such evidence of experience-based neuroplasticity ( Hernandez et al, 2019 ) as differences in the hippocampi of a taxi driver and a bus driver ( Maguire et al, 2000 , 2006 ).…”