It sounds like the functions you're dealing with are pretty nice and admit Laplace transforms. So we know that for two functions $f$ and $g$, the Laplace transform of their "convolution" (as written below) is: $\mathcal{L}(f\star g)=\mathcal{L}\int_0^t f(t-x)g(x)dx=F(s)G(s)$ where $F$ and $G$ are the Laplace transforms of $f,g$ respectively. Look at the proof in this link [here][1]. For $f(2t-x)$, following the notation in the link and working bottom up, the only difference that occurs is that instead of $t=\sigma+\tau$, you replace with $2t=\sigma+\tau$. This gives $\mathcal{L}\int_0^t f(2t-x)g(x)dx=\frac{1}{2}\int_0^\infty \int_0^\infty f(\sigma)e^{-s(\sigma+\tau)/2}d\sigma g(\tau)d\tau=\frac{1}{2}F(s/2) G(s/2)$ So for your equation, you get: $H(s)=\frac{1}{2}F(s/2)G(s/2)$ and you can now solve for $g$ by using the Laplace transform inverse. As far as references go, try "Introduction to integral equations with applications" By Abdul J. Jerri. [1]: http://math.fullerton.edu/mathews/c2003/laplacetransform/LaplaceConvolutionTheorem.1.pdf