“…The PT has been characterized as a computational hub for processing spectrotemporal variation in auditory perception (Griffiths & Warren, 2002), as well as having a role in mapping acoustic speech signals to frontal lobe articulatory networks (Hickok & Poeppel, 2007), and in auditory attention (Hirnstein, Westerhausen, & Hugdahl, 2013). Given these important roles of the PT in speech and language, and its asymmetrical nature in the typically developed brain, there has been much interest in whether individual differences in PT asymmetry are associated with traits that involve changes in language cognition, including dyslexia, reduced verbal ability, and schizophrenia (Eckert et al, 2008;Frank & Pavlakis, 2001;Hasan et al, 2011;Kawasaki et al, 2008;McCarley et al, 2002;Oertel et al, 2010;Shapleske et al, 1999;Sommer, Ramsey, Kahn, Aleman, & Bouma, 2001). These studies have shown that alterations in PT asymmetry may be relevant to some etiological subtypes of these complex traits, although are not necessarily a universal feature of them (Bishop, 2013).…”