“…By understanding the nature of how such multistable percepts alternate, it is possible to gain insight into the underlying mechanisms of perception and cognition. Studying the pattern of reversals between competing multistable percepts provides a tangible means to uncover the mechanisms of inhibition, adaptation, and attention that shape the content of human consciousness and have featured prominently in cognitive neuroscience in the last two decades or so (e.g., Blake, 2001;Chong & Blake, 2006;Leopold & Logothetis, 1999;Meng & Tong, 2004;Panagiotaropoulos, Deco, Kapoor, & Logothetis, 2012;Panagiotaropoulos, Kapoor, Logothetis, & Deco, 2013;Parkkonen, Andersson, Ha¨ma¨la¨inen, & Hari, 2008;Srinivasan, Russell, Edelman, & Tononi, 1999;Tong, Meng, & Blake, 2006). Moreover, perceptual alternations have contributed to clarifying the link between visual awareness and oscillatory brain activity (Matsuzaki, Juha´sz, & Asano, 2012;Sokoliuk & VanRullen, 2013) which is thought to be responsible for the temporal structure of conscious perception (Jensen, Bonnefond, & VanRullen, 2012).…”