Restricting visual exploration directly impedes neural activity, functional connectivity, and memory.

2020 
We move our eyes to explore the visual world, extract information, and create memories. The number of gaze fixations (the stops that the eyes make) has been shown to correlate with activity in the hippocampus, a region critical for memory, and with later recognition memory. Here, we combined eyetracking with fMRI to provide direct evidence for the relationships between gaze fixations, neural activity, and memory during scene viewing. Compared to free viewing, fixating a single location reduced: 1) subsequent memory, 2) neural activity along the ventral visual stream into the hippocampus, 3) neural similarity between effects of subsequent memory and visual exploration, and 4) functional connectivity among the hippocampus, parahippocampal place area, and other cortical regions. Gaze fixations were uniquely related to hippocampal activity, even after controlling for neural effects due to subsequent memory. Individual gaze fixations may provide the basic unit of information on which memory binding processes operate.
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