“…Concentrated in California, Texas, New Mexico, New York, and Florida, but growing rapidly in other regions, current census information indicates that the majority (64%) of Latino/Hispanics in the United States describe themselves as having Mexican background, 10%are Puerto Rican, Cuban, Salvadoran and Dominican are 3% each, and the remainder describe themselves as having other Central American, South American or other Hispanic or Latino origins. I will not attempt to comprehensively cite all the neuropsychological literature concentrating on Latino American participants across different regions of the US, but it is critical to recognize that this work is relevant to English-speaking, Spanish-speaking, and bilingual people (Ardila, Rosselli, & Puente, 1994; Artiola i Fortuny, Heaton, & Hermosillo, 1998; Artiola i Fortuny & Mullaney, 1997; Boone et al, 2007; Cherner et al, 2007; Echemendia, Harris, Congett, Diaz, & Puente, 1997; Heaton et al, 2001; Judd& Beggs, 2005; Llorente, 2007; Llorente, Ponton, Taussig, & Satz, 1999; Loewenstein, Arguelles, Barker, & Duara, 1993; Lopez & Taussig, 1991; Mungas, Reed, Marshall, & Gonzalez, 2000; Ponton & Ardila, 1999; Ponton et al, 1996; Rey, Feldman, Rivas-Vazquez, Levin, & Benton, 1999; Uzzell, Ponton, & Ardila, 2007)(Rivera-Mindt et al, this issue). The tremendous body of literature in Spanish-speaking countries should also be required reading for clinicians and researchers (Artiola i Fortuny et al, 1998; Barraquer-Bordas, 1999; Fernandez & Marcopulos, 2008; Matute, Rosselli, Ardila, & Morales, 2004; Ostrosky-Solis, Ardila, & Rosselli, 1999; Rosselli & Ardila, 2003).…”