I've finally made some sense of your original post. Those types of grpahs are peculiar to Navy shock and vibration, e.g., MIL-STD-167 and MIL-S-901D. The basic (mis)information is that the axes only apply to sinusoidal excitations, hence the prefix "psuedo." The psuedo-velocity is what the velocity would be if you had a sinusoidal excitation of that frequency with hypothetical amplitude based on the integration of the sinewave velocity.
If you can find it, the July 14, 1972 NRL Report 7396, "Shipboard Shock and Navy Devices for its Simulation," by E.W. Clements, is the reference material for MIL-S-901D. There's some good tutorial material in the front, discussing plotting various shock profiles on 4-coordinate graphs. It's hypothetically available from the National Technical Information Service, but my hard copy was gotten years ago, so I don't know if it's still available.
If this is the sort of thing you're looking at then the only thing you can take from these graphs is that it's comparable to the Fourier transform of the input stimulus, be it the actual shock pulse or the random vibration background.
TTFN