“…Over the past two decades, liquid chromatography coupled with triple quadrupole mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) and high-resolution mass spectrometry have attracted widespread popularity for mycotoxin determination due to their inherent specificity, sensitivity, and accuracy. ,, These techniques have emerged as the “gold standard” for multimycotoxin quantitative analysis. , Since mass spectrometry lacks inherent calibration, diverse calibration strategies have been developed to enhance accuracy and precision . Consequently, in the pursuit of a dependable analytical approach, the creation of calibration curves stands out as a pivotal phase. − The present state of research methods predominantly concentrated on individual mycotoxins or specific mycotoxin types, employing the conventional multisample external calibration curve (MSCC). , This approach involves introducing six nonzero concentrations into a blank matrix to perform the MSCC, enabling the back-calculation of the analyte’s concentration of interest . Nevertheless, when confronted with the simultaneous quantification of an array of compounds, the MSCC method proves laborious and time-intensive, primarily due to the extensive preparation of working standard solutions. , The one-point calibration (OPC) method simplifies the procedure by requiring just a single measurement point; its drawback is evident, that is, a lack of a second calibration point to characterize the instrument’s dynamic response adequately. , Typically, the OPC method is more suitable when the sample’s analyte concentration closely aligns with the value of the concentrations generated in the OPC.…”