“…Viewed in a broader context, this idea leads us to rethink the potential of other multicolor nonlinear-optical processes, such as multiphoton-absorption-driven fluorescence [26,27] and photochromism, [28] as well as transient refraction/ absorption, [29][30][31] and to explore whether a single-beam implementation of these methods could help advance their real-life applications. The thrust for such an extension is now stronger than ever, as the range of applications of multicolor nonlinear processes continues to grow, extending from canonical, all-optical time-resolved studies [31][32][33][34] to multimodal bioimaging, [35,36] optical data storage, [37] neuroscience, [38] attosecond physics, [39][40][41][42] and innovative pump-probe approaches combining conventional lasers with advanced free-electron radiation sources, [43,44] as well as ultrashort optical and electron pulses. [45] Here, we extend the Motzkus-Silberberg ideas of single-beam nonlinear optics to multicolor multiphoton absorption spectroscopy.…”