“…For those who study the process of acculturation among immigrants or sojourners, such as, for example, international students, it may be important to understand that, just as people may identify simultaneously with more than one culture (Oetting et al, 1998), they may internalize their unique or multiple cultural identities for different reasons. When such internalization is more autonomous, however, it is more likely to be accompanied by wellbeing, whether the culture is one's heritage culture, as it was for participants in the three samples reported herein, or, by extension, whether the culture is some other culture to which one has been exposed through choice or circumstance (Amiot, Doucerain, Zhou, & Ryder, 2018;Chu, 2015;Yang, et al, 2018). The acculturation literature typically looks at cultural identity or, alternatively, cultural identification.…”