+- David Cok of GrammaTech, Inc., for suggesting numerous improvements in CVC4's
+ SMT-LIBv2 compliance in 2013 and 2014.
+
+- Peter Collingbourne (formerly of the Multicore Programming Group at Imperial
+ College London, headed by Alastair Donaldson) for developing and submitting a
+ number of patches in September 2012 related to SMT-LIBv2 compliance.
+
+- Simon Dierl for fixing the ENABLE_BEST option in the build system in 2019.
+
+- Finn Haedicke of University of Bremen, Germany for fixing namespace specifiers
+ in CVC4's version of minisat in 2015.
+
+- Pat Hawks for writing tests for CVC4's Java API.
+
+- Thomas Hunger for some important patches to CVC4's SWIG interfaces in March
+ 2014.
+
+- Andrew V. Jones for several fixes in 2019 and 2020.
+
+- Mark Laws for fixes in the test suite for Windows in 2017.
+
+- Ken Matsui for fixing compiler warnings in 2019.
+
+- Cristian Mattarei of Stanford University for fixing an issue with parsing
+ floating point numbers in 2017.
+
+- Jordy Ruiz of University of Toulouse for fixing throw specifiers on the theory
+ output channels in 2015.
+
+- Clement Pit-Claudel of MIT for improving the signal handling support for
+ Windows builds in 2017.
+
+- Florian Schanda for improving the readability of output of get-model in 2018.
+
+- Tom Smeding for a fix in the contrib/get-antlr-3.4 script in 2018.
+
+- Piotr Troja for several fixes in 2019.
+
+- Arjun Viswanathan for improvements in the CVC and the SMT2 parser.
+
+- Amalee Wilson for a modification of our branch-and-bound method in the linear
+ integer solver to generate ternary clauses instead of binary clauses in 2020.
+ The new method is inspired by the Unit-Cube Tests of Bromberger and Weidenbach
+ at IJCAR'2016.
+
+- Fabian Wolff in 2016 for fixing several spelling mistakes.
+
+- Justin Xu for contributing to refactoring CVC4's preprocessing infrastructure.