“…Chinese-Americans (e.g., Kaufman-Scarborough, 2000;Ownbey & Horridge, 1997), Chinese-Canadians (e.g., Chen, Aung, Zhou, & Kanetkar, 2005;Chia & Costigan, 2006), and Chinese-Australians (e.g., Quester, Karunaratna, & Chong, 2001). Acculturation has also received some attention in the hospitality literature, with some studies examining the effects of acculturation on the dining-out behavior of Chinese and Korean immigrants in US and Canada (Bojanic & Xu, 2006;Rajagopal, Zheng, Kang, & Lee, 2009;Yang, 2010), the restaurant selection of Korean-Americans versus that of US-born non-Koreans (Magnini, 2010), and the travel behavior of Korean-Australians (Lee & Cox, 2007). These studies found that the extent of acculturation produced significant differences among respondents in terms of their dining-out behavior, restaurant selection, and travel behavior.…”