Recent research has shown that expertise in English and music
reading both rely more on left hemisphere (LH) processing
whereas Chinese character processing is more bilateral. Accordingly,
music-reading expertise may influence hemispheric
lateralization in English word processing more than in Chinese
processing due to stronger competition in LH processing.
Here we recruited musicians and non-musicians in a divided
visual field study of English word and Chinese character naming.
In English word processing, whereas non-musicians
showed a typical right visual field (RVF)/LH advantage, musicians
showed a left visual field (LVF)/right hemisphere
(RH) advantage and responded significantly faster than nonmusicians
in both the LVF and the center position. This effect
may be due to competition for LH processing between music
and English reading expertise, making musicians’ English
word processing more right-lateralized. In contrast, in Chinese
character naming, both musicians and non-musicians
showed a similar bilateral pattern. This result suggests that
music reading experience may have differential influences on
the processing of different languages, depending on their similarities
in the cognitive processes involved