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ERRATA Trends in Ambulatory Self-Report: The Role of Momentary Experience in Psychosomatic Medicine: Erratum In the article ‘‘Trends in Ambulatory Self-Report: The Role of Momentary Experience in Psychosomatic Medicine,’’ published in the May 2012 issue, a production error resulted in the word ‘‘semantic’’ being mistakenly replaced by the word ‘‘episodic’’ in five places on page 330 in the print version of the article. The text has been corrected in the HTML and PDF versions of the article online. The corrected sentences appear below, with the corrected word in bold: From the first paragraph: This shift was rooted in research from cognitive psychology, which, at the time, distinguished between semantic and episodic declarative memory as distinct mental processes (56). Although semantic and episodic memory are now considered types of memory processing tasks, rather than distinctive knowledge systems (57,58), research from cognitive psychology helped researchers to understand that the distinctions between traditional and momentary self-reports were more than a simple matter of biasVthey were reflecting different sources of knowledge that people use when reporting their subjective experiences in these different ways. From the second paragraph: As shown in Table 1, trait self-reports were characterized as measuring semantic knowledgeVthat is, conceptual knowledge extracted from momentary experience (among other sources) that is no longer associated with time and place. Also from the second paragraph: When longer-term retrospective reports are used (e.g., 1- to 4-week recall), respondents seem to stop trying to recall and summarize memories for specific experiences and instead start accessing relevant semantic knowledge to help guide their verbal reports (63). From the second column, first paragraph: In 1985, Tulving (60) wrote about different qualities of consciousnessV autonoetic and noetic consciousVwhen people use semantic and episodic memory, respectively. REFERENCE Conner TS, Barrett LF. Trends in ambulatory self-report: the role of momentary experience in psychosomatic medicine. Psychosom Med 74:327Y37. DOI: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e3182794ee0 Mental Stress-Induced Ischemia in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease: Echocardiographic Characteristics and Relation to Exercise-Induced Ischemia: Erratum In the article, ‘‘Mental StressYInduced Ischemia in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease: Echocardiographic Characteristics and Relation to Exercise-Induced Ischemia,’’ published in the September 2012 issue, a hyphen was omitted in an author’s last name. ‘‘Ana Djordjevic Dikic’’ should instead have been listed as Ana Djordjevic-Dikic. REFERENCE Stepanovic J, Ostojic M, Beleslin B, Vukovic O, Djordjevic-Dikic A, Giga V, Nedeljkovic I, Nedeljkovic M, Stojkovic S, Vukcevic V, Dobric M, Petrasinovic Z, Marinkovic J, Lecic-Tosevski D. Mental stress-induced ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease: echocardiographic characteristics and relation to exercise-induced ischemia. Psychosom Med 2012;74:766Y72. DOI: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e3182794f4e Psychosomatic Medicine 74:989 (2012) 0033-3174/12/7409Y0989 Copyright * 2012 by the American Psychosomatic Society Copyright © 2012 by the American Psychosomatic Society. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited. 989