“…Language dominance, or "observed asymmetries of skill in or use of one language over the other" (Birdsong 2014, p. 374), is a factor that is used by researchers to account for and explain variation in bilingual behavior (i.e., production, perception, processing, etc.). For instance, language dominance has been used to account for variation in studies including but not limited to: the production and perception of mid vowel contrasts (Amengual and Chamorro 2015), differences in voice onset time (VOT) in codeswitching contexts (Antoniou et al 2011;Tsui et al 2019), use of null/overt pronominal subjects and pre/post overt subjects (Argyri and Sorace 2007), child bilingual acquisition (Yip and Matthews 2006), and codeswitching patterns (Pérez-Leroux et al 2014). Further, language dominance is also a variable of interest for educators and administrators and clinical research (Gertken et al 2014).…”