“…Evidence supporting this hypothesis shows that musicians with earlier onset of musical training also perform better at pitch identification tasks ( Gregersen et al, 1999 ; Deutsch et al, 2006 , 2009 ; Vanzella and Schellenberg, 2010 ; Leite et al, 2016 ), and young children outperform adults in pitch identification tasks after only 3 weeks of training ( Russo et al, 2003 ). The “genetic hypothesis” states that AP is a genetically determined trait, and studies have pointed to genes associated with AP ( Theusch et al, 2009 ; Gregersen et al, 2013 ) and to a higher prevalence of high-performance AP among twins in comparison to non-twins ( Theusch and Gitschier, 2011 ; Bairnsfather et al, 2022a ). Finally, although initially disregarded, the “practice hypothesis” gained attention from the scientific community with recent studies showing that, with intensive training, some adults are capable of reaching an extraordinarily high and long-lasting precision at identifying pitches, comparable to musicians with “naturally” high AP ability ( Van Hedger et al, 2019 ; Wong et al, 2020a , 2020b ).…”