Background:
Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) is a technique to measure chemical shift and can be used to analyze biochemical parameters in a region-of-interest (ROI) of the tissue through a procedure called Quantification. Evaluation of accuracy and robustness of a quantification method is extremely important to help validate it in practice. This is particularly important when the method deals with absolute quantification as there is no consensus regarding absolute values found in different ROIs. Usually, such evaluation procedures are initially tested on simulated signals and then on phantom signals in the next step. Most of MRS phantoms designed so far are not multi-purpose, in that they evaluate either quality assurance and reliability, or absolute quantification results.