Amplitude attributes use the seismic signal amplitude as the basis for their computation.
Mean amplitude A post-stack attribute that computes the arithmetic mean of the amplitudes of a trace within a specified window. This can be used to observe the trace bias which could indicate the presence of a
bright spot.
Average energy A post-stack attribute that computes the sum of the squared amplitudes divided by the number of samples within the specified window used. This provides a measure of reflectivity and allows one to map direct hydrocarbon indicators within a zone of interest.
RMS (root mean square) amplitude A post-stack attribute that computes the square root of the sum of squared amplitudes divided by the number of samples within the specified window used. With this
root mean square amplitude, one can measure reflectivity in order to map direct hydrocarbon indicators in a zone of interest. However, RMS is sensitive to noise as it squares every value within the window.
Maximum magnitude A post-stack attribute that computes the maximum value of the absolute value of the amplitudes within a window. This can be used to map the strongest direct hydrocarbon indicator within a zone of interest.
AVO attributes AVO (amplitude versus offset) attributes are pre-stack attributes that have as the basis for their computation, the variation in amplitude of a seismic reflection with varying offset. These attributes include: AVO intercept, AVO gradient, intercept multiplied by gradient, far minus near, fluid factor, etc.
Anelastic attenuation factor The
anelastic attenuation factor (or Q) is a seismic attribute that can be determined from seismic reflection data for both
reservoir characterisation and advanced
seismic processing. ==Time/Horizon attributes==