In ASP.NET (classic), when configuring an await to be ConfigureAwait(false) the default context is used to resume execution after the await instead of AspNetSynchronizationContext.
According to this article (table two thirds down) AspNetSynchronizationContext is implemented to execute one continuation at a time. The default SynchronizationContext executes continuations in parallel, potentially in more than one thread at a time.
So my question is, based on this information, is it true that applying ConfigureAwait(false) can potentially cause continuations to run in parallel, occupying multiple threads at a time for a single http request?
As an aside, after reading this article on SynchronizationContext in ASP.NET Core, Stephen warns of the implicit parallelism because there is no AspNetSynchronizationContext.