Mark N. Wallace
University of Nottingham
69 Papers
919 Citations
Mark N. Wallace is an academic researcher from University of Nottingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Auditory cortex & Inferior colliculus. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 65 publications. Previous affiliations of Mark N. Wallace include University of Aberdeen & University of California, Irvine.
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Papers
Intrinsic inter- and intralaminar connections and their relationship to the tonotopic map in cat primary auditory cortex.
TL;DR: In selected experiments portions of the tonotopic map in AI were mapped by single unit recording and subsequently the map was related to patches of anterogradely labeled fibers that surrounded injections of PHA-L.
161
NADPH-diaphorase activity in activated astrocytes represents inducible nitric oxide synthase
Mark N. Wallace,S.K. Bisland +1 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that a high proportion of activated astrocytes and a small proportion of invading macrophages are induced to express moderate to high levels of nitric oxide synthase following neuronal damage.
109
Laminar differences in the response properties of cells in the primary auditory cortex.
Mark N. Wallace,Alan R. Palmer +1 more
TL;DR: Comparison of response properties of cells in all six layers of AI in anaesthetised guinea pigs shows consistent with a model of AI that involves separate inputs to different layers and descending outputs from layers V/VI (to thalamus and brainstem) that are different from the output from layers II/III (to ipsilateral cortex).
93
Neural changes accompanying tinnitus following unilateral acoustic trauma in the guinea pig
Ben Coomber,Joel I. Berger,Victoria L. Kowalkowski,Trevor M. Shackleton,Alan R. Palmer,Mark N. Wallace +5 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that measuring NOS in the VCN and recording ABRs supplement behavioural methods for confirming tinnitus in animals, and that nitric oxide is involved in plastic neural changes associated with tinnitis.
90
Activated astrocytes of the mouse hippocampus contain high levels of NADPH-diaphorase.
Mark N. Wallace,Kjeld Fredens +1 more
TL;DR: Astrocytes activated by intense neuronal activity, as well as by direct mechanical damage, express high levels of NADPH-diaphorase.
87