“…To further interrogate the nature of information represented in the scanpath, we additionally correlated gaze reinstatement with measures of visual (i.e., stimulus-driven; bottom-up) and informational (i.e., participant-driven; bottom-up and top-down) saliency. Given that prior work has revealed a significant role for top-down features (e.g., meaning, Henderson & Hayes, 2018; scene content, O’Connell & Walther, 2015) in guiding eye movements, above and beyond bottom-up image features (e.g., luminance, contrast, Itti & Koch, 2000), we hypothesized that gaze reinstatement would be related particularly to the viewing of informationally salient image regions. Finally, to uncover the neural correlates of functional gaze reinstatement, we analyzed neural activity patterns at encoding, both across the whole-brain and in memory-related regions of interest (i.e., HPC, PPA, see Liu et al, 2020), to identify brain regions that (1) predicted subsequent gaze reinstatement at retrieval, and (2) showed overlapping subsequent gaze reinstatement and subsequent memory effects.…”