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  1. UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database. 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.

  2. The Phonetics Lab has copies of several kinds of physiology recordings/data. (1) In the Audio Lab (room B) filing drawers is the database compiled by Sarah Dart and described in Working Papers #66 (1987): xerox copies of all the Xray traces she could find in the literature, except for those from books already owned by Peter Ladefoged.

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  4. phoible.org › contributors › UPSIDPHOIBLE 2.0

    The UPSID folder contains data from the UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database: Maddieson, I., & Precoda, K. (1990). Updating UPSID. UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics, 74, 104–111. The contents and extraction pipeline for these data are described in (chapter 4): Moran, Steven. (2012). Phonetics Information Base and Lexicon.

  5. The UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database. Data on the phonological systems of 451 languages, with programs to access it, by Ian Maddieson and Kristin Precoda. This is an elderly DOS program (and thus Windows only), neither of whose developers are still at UCLA, and no support is offered.

  6. If you are citing phoneme inventory data for a particular language or languages, please use the name of the language as the title, and include the original data source as an element within PHOIBLE. If possible also include the URL for the inventory being referenced. For example: UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database. 2014.

  7. This index is arranged according to the phonetic classification of the segments, and includes the number of languages with each given segment type and a list of the languages in which it occurs. The phoneme charts and segment index make available to other users the basic data of UPSID. With these tools, much of the information in the database ...

  8. Aug 4, 2010 · 1 The size and structure of phonological inventories; 2 Stops and affricates; 3 Fricatives; 4 Nasals; 5 Liquids; 6 Vocoid approximants; 7 Glottalic and laryngealized consonants; 8 Vowels; 9 Insights on vowel spacing; 10 The design of the UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database (UPSID) Appendix A Language lists and bibliography of data sources

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