NGA Model for Average Horizontal Component of Peak Ground Motion and Response Spectra
	
	
		
 			 			 				NGA Model for Average Horizontal Component of 
Peak Ground Motion and Response Spectra 
Brian S.-J. Chiou 
California Department of Transportation 
and 
Robert R. Youngs 
AMEC Geomatrix 
 
PEER 2008/09 
NOVEMBER 2008 
 
ABSTRACT 
We present a model for estimating horizontal ground motion amplitudes caused by shallow 
crustal earthquakes occurring in active tectonic environments. The model provides predictive 
relationships for the orientation-independent average horizontal component of ground motions. 
Relationships are provided for peak acceleration, peak velocity, and 5-percent damped pseudospectral 
acceleration for spectral periods of 0.01–10 sec. The model represents an update of the 
relationships developed by Sadigh et al. (1997) and includes improved magnitude and distance 
scaling forms as well as hanging-wall effects. Site effects are represented by smooth functions of 
average shear-wave velocity of the upper 30 m (VS30) and sediment depth. The new model 
predicts median ground motion that is similar to Sadigh et al. (1997) at short spectral periods, but 
lower ground motions at longer periods. The new model produces slightly lower ground motions 
in the distance range of 10–50 km and larger ground motions at larger distances. The aleatory 
variability in ground motion amplitude was found to depend on earthquake magnitude and on the 
degree of nonlinear soil response. For large-magnitude earthquakes, the aleatory variability is 
larger than found by Sadigh et al. (1997).