“…Eye‐tracking studies also indicate they have detected both possibilities (e.g., Ferguson & Sanford, 2008; Ferguson, Sanford, & Leuthold, 2008; see also Nieuwland & Martin, 2012). For example, they look at an image corresponding to the presupposed facts more often when they hear the counterfactual than a factual conditional, and they look at an image corresponding to the conjecture equally often for both sorts of conditionals (e.g., Orenes, Garcia‐Madruga, Gomez‐Veiga, Espino, & Byrne, 2019). Accordingly, brain imaging fMRI studies show that counterfactuals activate areas related to conflict detection such as the medial prefrontal cortex (e.g., Kulakova, Aichhorn, Schurz, Kronbichler, & Perner, 2013; Van Hoeck et al, 2013).…”