“…Some of the most overlapping findings between musicians and right‐lateralized persons are: (a) greater gray matter density and volume in the right auditory cortex in musicians (Bermudez, Lerch, Evans, & Zatorre, ; Palomar‐García, Zatorre, Ventura‐Campos, Bueichekú, & Ávila, ) and rightward asymmetry of a portion of the auditory cortex in right‐lateralized persons (Greve et al, ); (b) a higher incidence of duplications in both HG in musicians (Benner et al, ) and a loss of leftward language lateralization when the left HG is duplicated (Tzourio‐Mazoyer et al, ); (c) a higher fractional anisotropy in the right arcuate fasciculus in musicians (Halwani, Loui, Rüber, & Schlaug, ) and a rightward asymmetry of arcuate fasciculus volume in right‐lateralized persons (Sreedharan et al, ); and (d) a thicker cortex in the right pars triangularis in musicians, correlating positively with pitch discrimination ability in nonmusicians (Bermudez et al, ; Novén, Schremm, Nilsson, Horne, & Roll, ), and a rightward asymmetry of Broca's area in right‐lateralized persons (Foundas et al, ; Josse et al, ; Keller et al, ). In fact, language and music are processes whose relationship has been demonstrated through interactions at the subcortical level of processing (Musacchia, Sams, Skoe, & Kraus, ) and the performance of some language skills (Slater & Kraus, ). Thus, given the similarity in the neuroanatomical correlates of the two conditions, we hypothesized that atypical language dominance would be found more frequently in left‐handed musicians than among left‐handed nonmusicians.…”