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The UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database (or UPSID) is a statistical survey of the phoneme inventories in 451 of the world's languages. The database was created by American phonetician Ian Maddieson for the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 1984 and has been updated several times.
The following are available free for downloading: UCLA Phonetics Lab Data (formerly Sounds of the World’s languages): Material illustrating the sounds of over 100 languages that have been investigated at UCLA, with an index of sounds by their phonetic characteristics, and an index of languages.
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UCLA Phonetics Lab Archive (raw data files not structured for teaching) (NOTE: These files have been digitized at very high sampling rates. It is often useful to downsample before acoustic analysis. See Henry for a Matlab routine to do this; or check out Praat scripts to do this.)
In the early 1980's, Ian Maddieson developed the UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database (UPSID), a computer-accessible database of contrastive segment inventories (Maddieson 1984).
InventoryLanguageSegmentsVowels369236257303Inventory Language # segments # vowels # consonants # tones Contributor Cite PHOIBLE 2.0 edited by Moran, Steven & McCloy, Daniel ...
PHOIBLE (short for "Phonetics Information Base and Lexicon") [1] is a linguistic database accessible through its website and compiling phonological inventories from primary documents and tertiary databases into a single, easily searchable sample.
The UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database (or UPSID) is a statistical survey of the phoneme inventories in 451 of the world's languages. The database was created by American phonetician Ian Maddieson for the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 1984 and has been updated several times. Bibliography. Maddieson, Ian. (1984).