here is a useful link to Single Molecule Blinking Microscopy references : http://www.microscopyu.com/references/superresolution/blink.html
with a copy of an extract: "The term Blink microscopy refers to the use of single-molecule imaging to exploit the fluctuating emission of fluorophores that are capable of photoswitching from a bright to a dark state (or from one emission wavelength to another) to construct superresolution images. Among the common blink techniques are ground state depletion with individual molecule return (GSDIM), reversible photobleaching microscopy (RPM), and dSTORM (direct STORM).
There is a good review on super-resolution in optical microscopy by Lothar Schermelleh: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/45275046_A_guide_to_super-resolution_fluorescence_microscopy?ev=prf_pub
Article A Guide to Super-Resolution Fluorescence Microscopy
just in case you are still lokking into this: The by far best piece is the one by Dekker and van den Boos I attach. However, given that it is from 97 some recent developments are missing,