Just as members of the public ask basic questions about 'intelligence' and bilingual ism, so questions often arise about bilinguals' brains. Neuroscientific/neurolinguistics research on bilingualism frequently asks interrelated questions such as: How are multiple languages represented and controlled in the brain? And what are the consequences and implications of experience with multiple languages? (Buchweitz & Prat, 2013). The expectation has been that images of relevant areas of the brain would help us answer these questions. Advances in neuroimaging have led to bilinguals being studied by (a) event-related brain potentials (ERP), (b) positron emission tomography (PET), and (c) functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Basically, each approach tries to take a snapshot of which part of the brain is doing what when we are thinking. ERP