I am going to take a stab at this.
When studying the difference between Roots and Whipple, it helped me understand how turbochargers work a little better.
Roots superchargers are just big fans. The blow in air into the intake manifold. So all you are really doing is taking air from a outside air pressure, and BLOWING into an intake manifold. This does of course increase the air pressure inside the intake manifold, but the blowing has to maintain the entire manifold at that pressure. They can generate quite a bit of heat and just isn't very efficient.
Now take Whipple or Screw type Superchargers. As they draw air into the screws, the screws actually compress the air before resleasing it into the manifold. I don't know the actual thermal dynamics of this, but whatever it is, it is much better so the air can reach a higher pressure without generating near as much heat. Then the air leaves the supercharger pre-compressed into the manifold where it MIGHT expands slightly(which would have a COOLING effect). I could assume that air pressure between the screws is higher than the actual manifold pressure, but I could be wrong. If I am wrong, then after the air leaves the screws, it gets compressed further like it would in the roots style SC, just dealing with higher pressures without the extra heat.
Compressor wheels act very similar, compressing the air as it flows through the fins. They don't call it a "COMPRESSOR" for nothing. If it didn't compress air the would probably just call it a FAN/BLOWER wheel instead.
Compressor maps represent how the wheel actually works. The pressure ratio is how much the actual compressor will compress the air before it leaves the fins, not how much pressure can be obtained by the BLOWING effect.
Anyway, that is how I see it, and why 25psi on a GT35R is different than 25psi on a GT40R.
Someone please correct me if I am wrong, I am still just learning.