“…Whereas several studies have reported that contextual relevance outweighs real-world constraints from an early moment on (e.g., a cartoon-like story about an amorous peanut can invert the relative ease of processing ''the peanut was salted'' as compared to ''the peanut in love'', Nieuwland & Van Berkum, 2006; see also Filik, 2008;Filik & Leuthold, 2008), some results on the processing of literally false or unrealistic sentences suggest that context does not completely overrule briefly disruptive effects of local violations (e.g., Hald, Steenbeek-Planting, & Hagoort, 2007;Warren, McConnell, & Rayner, 2008). For example, Warren et al reported that despite a fantasy-context (e.g., Harry Potter practicing magic spells on food items), words that incurred semantic violations (e.g., 'bread' in ''Harry used a book to teach the tough bread'') elicited longer fixations and gaze durations than in unproblematic sentences (e.g., ''Harry used a microwave to heat the tough bread'').…”