We study soliton pulse compression in materials with cascaded quadratic nonlinearities and show that the group-velocity mismatch creates two different temporally nonlocal regimes. They correspond to what is known as the stationary and nonstationary regimes. The theory accurately predicts the transition to the stationary regime, where highly efficient pulse compression is possible. c 2018 Optical Society of America OCIS codes: 320.5520, 320.7110, 190.5530, 190.2620, 190.4400 Efficient soliton pulse compression is possible using second-harmonic generation (SHG) in the limit of large phase mismatch, because a Kerr-like nonlinear phase shift is induced on the fundamental wave (FW). Large negative phase shifts can be created, since the phase mismatch determines the sign and magnitude of the effective cubic nonlinearity. This induced self-defocusing nonlinearity thus creates a negative linear chirp through an effective self-phase modulation (SPM) term, and the pulse can therefore be compressed with normal dispersion. Beam filamentation and other problems normally encountered due to self-focusing in cubic media are therefore avoided. This self-defocusing soliton compressor can create high-energy few-cycle fs pulses in bulk materials with no power limit [1][2][3][4]. However, the group-velocity mismatch (GVM) between the FW and second harmonic (SH) limits the pulse quality and compression ratio. Especially very short input pulses (< 100 fs) give asymmetric compressed pulses and pulse splitting occurs [4,5]. In this case, the system is in the nonstationary regime, and conversely when GVM effects can be neglected it is in the stationary regime [3][4][5]. Until now, the stationary regime was argued to be when the characteristic GVM length is 4 times longer than the SHG coherence length [1], while a more accurate perturbative description showed that the FW has a GVM-induced Raman-like term [4,5], which must be small for the system to be in the stationary regime [4]. However, no precise definition of the transition between the regimes exists.On the other hand, the concept of nonlocality provides accurate predictions of quadratic spatial solitons [6,7], and many other physical systems (see [8] for a review). Here we introduce the concept of nonlocality to the temporal regime and soliton pulse compression in quadratic nonlinear materials. As we shall show, GVM, the phase mismatch, and the SH group-velocity dispersion (GVD) all play a key role in defining the nonlocal behavior of the system. Two different nonlocal response functions appear naturally, one with a localized amplitude -representing the stationary regime -and one with a purely oscillatory amplitude -representing the nonstationary regime. In the presence of GVM they are asymmetric and thus give rise to a Raman effect on the compressed pulse.In the theoretical analysis we may neglect diffraction, higher-order dispersion, cubic Raman terms, and selfsteepening to get the SHG propagation equations for the FW (ω 1 ) and SH (ω 2 = 2ω 1 ) fields E 1,2 (z, t) [3, 9]:wher...