“…The left perisylvian cortex, including canonical Broca's and Wernicke's areas, is known to support gross language processes in healthy adults (Binder et al, ; Friederici, ; Gabrieli, Poldrack, & Desmond, ; Hirata et al, ; Kadis et al, ; Lohmann et al, ; Pei et al, ; Price, ; Purves et al, ; Toga and Thompson, ; Turken and Dronkers, ). However, participation of right perisylvian cortex and subcortical and cerebellar regions in language have also been documented (Berl et al, ; Booth, Wood, Lu, Houk, & Bitan, ; Desmond, Gabrieli, & Glover, ; Ferstl, Neumann, Bogler, & Von Cramon, ; Frings et al, ; Gabrieli et al, ; Houk et al, ; Kellett, Kellett, Stevenson, & Gernsbacher, ; Middleton and Strick, ; Muller and Meyer, ; Murdoch, ; Schmahmann, ; Stoodley, Valera, & Schmahmann, ; Stoodley and Schmahmann, ; Verly et al, ). In particular, seminal anatomical and behavioral studies have shown nonmotor contributions of the (right) cerebellum in a range of cognitive processes, including language (Leiner, Leiner, & Dow, ; Petersen, Fox, Snyder, & Raichle, ; Raichle et al, ; Schmahmann, ; see Price, , for review).…”