Site-specific seismic hazard studies involving detailed account of the site response require the prior estimate of the hazard at the local reference bedrock level. As the real characteristics of such local bedrock often correspond to ''hard-rock'' with S-wave velocity exceeding 1.5 km/s, ''standard rock'' PSHA estimates should be adjusted in order to replace the effects of ''standard-rock'' characteristics by those corresponding to the local bedrock. The current practice involves the computation of scaling factors determined on the basis of V S (S-wave velocity) and ''j 0 '' (site specific, high-frequency attenuation parameter) values, and generally predicts larger high-frequency motion on hard rock compared to standard rock. However, it also proves to be affected by large uncertainties (Biro and Renault, Proceedings of the 15th world conference on earthquake engineering, 24-28, 2012; Al Atik et al., Bull Seism Soc Am 104(1):336-346 2014), mainly attributed to (i) the measurement of host and target parameters, and (ii) the forward and inverse conversions from the response spectrum domain to the Fourier domain to apply the V S and j 0 adjustments. Moreover, recent studies (Ktenidou and Abrahamson, Seismol Res Lett 87(6):1465-1478, 2016) question the appropriateness of current V S-j 0 scaling factors, so that the significant amplification of high frequency content for hard-rock with respect to standard-rock seems overestimated. This paper discusses the key aspects of a few, recently proposed, alternatives to the standard approach. The calibration of GMPEs directly in the Fourier domain rather than in the response spectrum domain is one possibility (