Knet (pronounced "kay-net") is the Koç University deep learning framework implemented in Julia by Deniz Yuret and collaborators. Unlike gradient generating compilers like Theano and TensorFlow which force users into a restricted mini-language, Knet allows the definition and training of machine learning models using the full power and expressivity of Julia. Models are defined by describing only the forward calculation in plain Julia allowing helper functions, loops, conditionals, recursion, closures, tuples and dictionaries, array indexing and concatenation and almost everything else Julia offers. High performance is achieved by combining automatic differentiation of most of Julia with efficient GPU kernels and memory management. The computations can be performed on the GPU by simply using KnetArray instead of Array for parameters and data. Check out the full documentation (in progress) and the examples directory for more information.
- Installation
- Examples
- Benchmarks
- Function reference
- Optimization methods
- Under the hood
- Contributing
You can install Knet using Pkg.add("Knet")
. Some of the examples
use additional packages such as ArgParse, GZip, and JLD. These are not
required by Knet and are installed automatically when needed. See the
detailed installation instructions
as well as the section on using Amazon AWS
to experiment with GPU machines on the cloud with pre-installed Knet
images.
In Knet, a machine learning model is defined using plain Julia code. A typical model consists of a prediction and a loss function. The prediction function takes model parameters and some input, returns the prediction of the model for that input. The loss function measures how bad the prediction is with respect to some desired output. We train a model by adjusting its parameters to reduce the loss. In this section we will see the prediction, loss, and training functions for five models: linear regression, softmax classification, fully-connected, convolutional and recurrent neural networks.
Here is the prediction function and the corresponding quadratic loss function for a simple linear regression model:
predict(w,x) = w[1]*x .+ w[2] loss(w,x,y) = sumabs2(y - predict(w,x)) / size(y,2)
The variable w
is a list of parameters (it could be a Tuple,
Array, or Dict), x
is the input and y
is the desired
output. To train this model, we want to adjust its parameters to
reduce the loss on given training examples. The direction in the
parameter space in which the loss reduction is maximum is given by the
negative gradient of the loss. Knet uses the higher-order function
grad
from AutoGrad.jl to compute the gradient
direction:
using Knet lossgradient = grad(loss)
Note that grad
is a higher-order function that takes and returns
other functions. The lossgradient
function takes the same arguments
as loss
, e.g. dw = lossgradient(w,x,y)
. Instead of returning a
loss value, lossgradient
returns dw
, the gradient of the loss
with respect to its first argument w
. The type and size of dw
is
identical to w
, each entry in dw
gives the derivative of the
loss with respect to the corresponding entry in w
. See @doc grad
for more information.
Given some training data = [(x1,y1),(x2,y2),...]
, here is how we can
train this model:
function train(w, data; lr=.1) for (x,y) in data dw = lossgradient(w, x, y) for i in 1:length(w) w[i] -= lr * dw[i] end end return w end
We simply iterate over the input-output pairs in data, calculate the
lossgradient for each example, and move the parameters in the negative
gradient direction with a step size determined by the learning rate
lr
.
Let's train this model on the Housing dataset from the UCI Machine Learning Repository.
julia> url = "https://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/machine-learning-databases/housing/housing.data" julia> rawdata = readdlm(download(url)) julia> x = rawdata[:,1:13]' julia> x = (x .- mean(x,2)) ./ std(x,2) julia> y = rawdata[:,14:14]' julia> w = Any[ 0.1*randn(1,13), 0 ] julia> for i=1:10; train(w, [(x,y)]); println(loss(w,x,y)); end 366.0463078055053 ... 29.63709385230451
The dataset has housing related information for 506 neighborhoods in Boston from 1978. Each neighborhood is represented using 13 attributes such as crime rate or distance to employment centers. The goal is to predict the median value of the houses given in $1000's. After downloading, splitting and normalizing the data, we initialize the parameters randomly and take 10 steps in the negative gradient direction. We can see the loss dropping from 366.0 to 29.6. See housing.jl for more information on this example.
Note that grad
was the only function used that is not in the Julia
standard library. This is typical of models defined in Knet.
In this example we build a simple classification model for the MNIST handwritten digit recognition dataset. MNIST has 60000 training and 10000 test examples. Each input x consists of 784 pixels representing a 28x28 image. The corresponding output indicates the identity of the digit 0..9.
Classification models handle discrete outputs, as opposed to regression models which handle numeric outputs. We typically use the cross entropy loss function in classification models:
function loss(w,x,ygold) ypred = predict(w,x) ynorm = ypred .- log(sum(exp(ypred),1)) -sum(ygold .* ynorm) / size(ygold,2) end
Other than the change of loss function, the softmax model is identical
to the linear regression model. We use the same predict
, same
train
and set lossgradient=grad(loss)
as before. To see how well
our model classifies let's define an accuracy
function which returns
the percentage of instances classified correctly:
function accuracy(w, data) ncorrect = ninstance = 0 for (x, ygold) in data ypred = predict(w,x) ncorrect += sum(ygold .* (ypred .== maximum(ypred,1))) ninstance += size(ygold,2) end return ncorrect/ninstance end
Now let's train a model on the MNIST data:
julia> include(Pkg.dir("Knet/examples/mnist.jl")) julia> using MNIST: xtrn, ytrn, xtst, ytst, minibatch julia> dtrn = minibatch(xtrn, ytrn, 100) julia> dtst = minibatch(xtst, ytst, 100) julia> w = Any[ -0.1+0.2*rand(Float32,10,784), zeros(Float32,10,1) ] julia> println((:epoch, 0, :trn, accuracy(w,dtrn), :tst, accuracy(w,dtst))) julia> for epoch=1:10 train(w, dtrn; lr=0.5) println((:epoch, epoch, :trn, accuracy(w,dtrn), :tst, accuracy(w,dtst))) end (:epoch,0,:trn,0.11761667f0,:tst,0.121f0) (:epoch,1,:trn,0.9005f0,:tst,0.9048f0) ... (:epoch,10,:trn,0.9196f0,:tst,0.9153f0)
Including mnist.jl
loads the MNIST data, downloading it from the
internet if necessary, and provides a training set (xtrn,ytrn), test set
(xtst,ytst) and a minibatch
utility which we use to rearrange the
data into chunks of 100 instances. After randomly initializing the
parameters we train for 10 epochs, printing out training and test set
accuracy at every epoch. The final accuracy of about 92% is close to the
limit of what we can achieve with this type of model. To improve further
we must look beyond linear models.
A multi-layer perceptron, i.e. a fully connected feed-forward neural network, is basically a bunch of linear regression models stuck together with non-linearities in between.
We can define a MLP by slightly modifying the predict function:
function predict(w,x) for i=1:2:length(w)-2 x = max(0, w[i]*x .+ w[i+1]) end return w[end-1]*x .+ w[end] end
Here w[2k-1]
is the weight matrix and w[2k]
is the bias vector
for the k'th layer. max(0,a) implements the popular rectifier
non-linearity. Note that if w only has two entries, this is equivalent
to the linear and softmax models. By adding more entries to w, we can
define multi-layer perceptrons of arbitrary depth. Let's define one with
a single hidden layer of 64 units:
w = Any[ -0.1+0.2*rand(Float32,64,784), zeros(Float32,64,1), -0.1+0.2*rand(Float32,10,64), zeros(Float32,10,1) ]
The rest of the code is the same as the softmax model. We use the same cross-entropy loss function and the same training script. The code for this example is available in mnist.jl. The multi-layer perceptron does significantly better than the softmax model:
(:epoch,0,:trn,0.10166667f0,:tst,0.0977f0) (:epoch,1,:trn,0.9389167f0,:tst,0.9407f0) ... (:epoch,10,:trn,0.9866f0,:tst,0.9735f0)
To improve the performance further, we can use a convolutional neural networks (CNN). See the course notes by Andrej Karpathy for a good introduction to CNNs. We will implement the LeNet model which consists of two convolutional layers followed by two fully connected layers.
Knet provides the conv4(w,x)
and pool(x)
functions for the
implementation of convolutional nets (see @doc conv4
and @doc
pool
for details):
function predict(w,x0) x1 = pool(max(0, conv4(w[1],x0) .+ w[2])) x2 = pool(max(0, conv4(w[3],x1) .+ w[4])) x3 = max(0, w[5]*mat(x2) .+ w[6]) return w[7]*x3 .+ w[8] end
The weights for the convolutional net can be initialized as follows:
w = Any[ -0.1+0.2*rand(Float32,5,5,1,20), zeros(Float32,1,1,20,1), -0.1+0.2*rand(Float32,5,5,20,50), zeros(Float32,1,1,50,1), -0.1+0.2*rand(Float32,500,800), zeros(Float32,500,1), -0.1+0.2*rand(Float32,10,500), zeros(Float32,10,1) ]
Currently convolution and pooling are only supported on the GPU for 4-D
and 5-D arrays. So we reshape our data and transfer it to the GPU along
with the parameters by converting them into KnetArrays (see
@doc KnetArray
for more information):
dtrn = map(d->(KnetArray(reshape(d[1],(28,28,1,100))), KnetArray(d[2])), dtrn) dtst = map(d->(KnetArray(reshape(d[1],(28,28,1,100))), KnetArray(d[2])), dtst) w = map(KnetArray, w)
The training proceeds as before giving us even better results. The code for the LeNet example can be found in lenet.jl.
(:epoch,0,:trn,0.12215f0,:tst,0.1263f0) (:epoch,1,:trn,0.96963334f0,:tst,0.971f0) ... (:epoch,10,:trn,0.99553335f0,:tst,0.9879f0)
In this section we will see how to implement a recurrent neural network (RNN) in Knet. An RNN is a class of neural network where connections between units form a directed cycle, which allows them to keep a persistent state over time. This gives them the ability to process sequences of arbitrary length one element at a time, while keeping track of what happened at previous elements.
As an example, we will build a character-level language model inspired by "The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Recurrent Neural Networks" from the Andrej Karpathy blog. The model can be trained with different genres of text, and can be used to generate original text in the same style.
It turns out simple RNNs are not very good at remembering things for a very long time. Currently the most popular solution is to use a more complicated unit like the Long Short Term Memory (LSTM). An LSTM controls the information flow into and out of the unit using gates similar to digital circuits and can model long term dependencies. See Understanding LSTM Networks by Christopher Olah for a good overview of LSTMs.
The code below shows one way to define an LSTM in Knet. The first two
arguments are the parameters, the weight matrix and the bias vector. The
next two arguments hold the internal state of the LSTM: the hidden and
cell arrays. The last argument is the input. Note that for performance
reasons we lump all the parameters of the LSTM into one matrix-vector
pair instead of using separate parameters for each gate. This way we can
perform a single matrix multiplication, and recover the gates using
array indexing. We represent input, hidden and cell as row vectors
rather than column vectors for more efficient concatenation and
indexing. sigm
and tanh
are the sigmoid and the hyperbolic
tangent activation functions. The LSTM returns the updated state
variables hidden
and cell
.
function lstm(weight,bias,hidden,cell,input) gates = hcat(input,hidden) * weight .+ bias hsize = size(hidden,2) forget = sigm(gates[:,1:hsize]) ingate = sigm(gates[:,1+hsize:2hsize]) outgate = sigm(gates[:,1+2hsize:3hsize]) change = tanh(gates[:,1+3hsize:end]) cell = cell .* forget + ingate .* change hidden = outgate .* tanh(cell) return (hidden,cell) end
The LSTM has an input gate, forget gate and an output gate that control
information flow. Each gate depends on the current input
value, and
the last hidden state hidden
. The memory value cell
is computed
by blending a new value change
with the old cell
value under the
control of input and forget gates. The output gate decides how much of
the cell
is shared with the outside world.
If an input gate element is close to 0, the corresponding element in the
new input
will have little effect on the memory cell. If a forget
gate element is close to 1, the contents of the corresponding memory
cell can be preserved for a long time. Thus the LSTM has the ability to
pay attention to the current input, or reminisce in the past, and it can
learn when to do which based on the problem.
To build a language model, we need to predict the next character in a
piece of text given the current character and recent history as encoded
in the internal state. The predict
function below implements a
multi-layer LSTM model. s[2k-1:2k]
hold the hidden and cell arrays
and w[2k-1:2k]
hold the weight and bias parameters for the k'th LSTM
layer. The last three elements of w
are the embedding matrix and the
weight/bias for the final prediction. predict
takes the current
character encoded in x
as a one-hot row vector, multiplies it with
the embedding matrix, passes it through a number of LSTM layers, and
converts the output of the final layer to the same number of dimensions
as the input using a linear transformation. The state variable s
is
modified in-place.
function predict(w, s, x) x = x * w[end-2] for i = 1:2:length(s) (s[i],s[i+1]) = lstm(w[i],w[i+1],s[i],s[i+1],x) x = s[i] end return x * w[end-1] .+ w[end] end
To train the language model we will use Backpropagation Through Time (BPTT) which basically means running the network on a given sequence and updating the parameters based on the total loss. Here is a function that calculates the total cross-entropy loss for a given (sub)sequence:
function loss(param,state,sequence,range=1:length(sequence)-1) total = 0.0; count = 0 atype = typeof(getval(param[1])) input = convert(atype,sequence[first(range)]) for t in range ypred = predict(param,state,input) ynorm = logp(ypred,2) # ypred .- log(sum(exp(ypred),2)) ygold = convert(atype,sequence[t+1]) total += sum(ygold .* ynorm) count += size(ygold,1) input = ygold end return -total / count end
Here param
and state
hold the parameters and the state of the
model, sequence
and range
give us the input sequence and a
possible range over it to process. We convert the entries in the
sequence to inputs that have the same type as the parameters one at a
time (to conserve GPU memory). We use each token in the given range as
an input to predict the next token. The average cross-entropy loss per
token is returned.
To generate text we sample each character randomly using the probabilities predicted by the model based on the previous character:
function generate(param, state, vocab, nchar) index_to_char = Array(Char, length(vocab)) for (k,v) in vocab; index_to_char[v] = k; end input = oftype(param[1], zeros(1,length(vocab))) index = 1 for t in 1:nchar ypred = predict(param,state,input) input[index] = 0 index = sample(exp(logp(ypred))) print(index_to_char[index]) input[index] = 1 end println() end
Here param
and state
hold the parameters and state variables as
usual. vocab
is a Char->Int dictionary of the characters that can be
produced by the model, and nchar
gives the number of characters to
generate. We initialize the input as a zero vector and use predict
to predict subsequent characters. sample
picks a random index based
on the normalized probabilities output by the model.
At this point we can train the network on any given piece of text (or other discrete sequence). For efficiency it is best to minibatch the training data and run BPTT on small subsequences. See charlm.jl for details. Here is a sample run on 'The Complete Works of William Shakespeare':
$ cd .julia/Knet/examples $ wget http://www.gutenberg.org/files/100/100.txt $ julia charlm.jl --data 100.txt --epochs 10 --winit 0.3 --save shakespeare.jld ... takes about 10 minutes on a GPU machine $ julia charlm.jl --load shakespeare.jld --generate 1000 Pand soping them, my lord, if such a foolish? MARTER. My lord, and nothing in England's ground to new comp'd. To bless your view of wot their dullst. If Doth no ape; Which with the heart. Rome father stuff These shall sweet Mary against a sudden him Upon up th' night is a wits not that honour, Shouts have sure? MACBETH. Hark? And, Halcance doth never memory I be thou what My enties mights in Tim thou? PIESTO. Which it time's purpose mine hortful and is my Lord. BOTTOM. My lord, good mine eyest, then: I will not set up. LUCILIUS. Who shall
Each of the examples above was used as a benchmark to compare Knet with other frameworks. The table below shows the number of seconds it takes to train a given model for a particular dataset, number of epochs and minibatch size for Knet, Theano, Torch, Caffe and TensorFlow. Knet has comparable performance to other commonly used frameworks.
model | dataset | epochs | batch | Knet | Theano | Torch | Caffe | TFlow |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LinReg | Housing | 10K | 506 | 2.84 | 1.88 | 2.66 | 2.35 | 5.92 |
Softmax | MNIST | 10 | 100 | 2.35 | 1.40 | 2.88 | 2.45 | 5.57 |
MLP | MNIST | 10 | 100 | 3.68 | 2.31 | 4.03 | 3.69 | 6.94 |
LeNet | MNIST | 1 | 100 | 3.59 | 3.03 | 1.69 | 3.54 | 8.77 |
CharLM | Hiawatha | 1 | 128 | 2.25 | 2.42 | 2.23 | 1.43 | 2.86 |
The benchmarking was done on g2.2xlarge GPU instances on Amazon
AWS. The code is available at github and as machine
image deep_AMI_v6
at AWS N.California. See the section on using
Amazon AWS
for more information. The datasets are available online using the
following links: Housing, MNIST, Hiawatha. The MLP uses a single
hidden layer of 64 units. CharLM uses a single layer LSTM language
model with embedding and hidden layer sizes set to 256 and trained
using BPTT with a sequence length of 100. Each dataset was minibatched
and transferred to GPU prior to benchmarking when possible.
We implement machine learning models in Knet using regular Julia code
and the grad
function. Knet defines a few more utility functions
listed below. See @doc <function>
for full details.
grad |
returns the gradient function. |
KnetArray |
constructs a GPU array. |
gradcheck |
compares gradients with numeric approximations. |
Knet.dir |
returns a path relative to Knet root. |
gpu |
determines which GPU Knet uses. |
relu |
returns max(0,x) |
sigm |
returns (1./(1+exp(-x))) |
invx |
returns (1./x) |
logp |
returns x .- log(sum(exp(x),[dims])) |
logsumexp |
returns log(sum(exp(x),[dims])) |
conv4 |
executes convolutions or cross-correlations. |
pool |
replaces several adjacent values with their mean or maximum. |
mat |
reshapes its input into a two-dimensional matrix. |
update! |
updates the weight depending on the gradient and the parameters of the optimization method |
In the examples above, we used simple SGD as the optimization method and performed parameter updates manually using w[i] -= lr * dw[i]
. The update!
function provides more optimization methods and can be used in place of this manual update. In addition to a weight array w[i]
and its gradient dw[i]
, update!
requires a third argument encapsulating the type, options, and state of the optimization method. The constructors of the supported optimization methods are listed below. See @doc Sgd
etc. for full details. Note that in general we need to keep one of these state variables per weight array, see optimizers.jl for example usage.
Sgd |
encapsulates learning rate |
Momentum |
encapsulates learning rate, gamma and velocity |
Adam |
encapsualtes learning rate, beta1, beta2, epsilon, time, first and second moments |
Adagrad |
encapsualtes learning rate, epsilon and accumulated gradients (G) |
Adadelta |
encapsulates learning rate, rho, epsilon, accumulated gradients (G) and updates (delta) |
Rmsprop |
encapsulates learning rate, rho, epsilon and accumulated gradients (G) |
Knet relies on the AutoGrad package and the KnetArray data type for its functionality and performance. AutoGrad computes the gradient of Julia functions and KnetArray implements high performance GPU arrays with custom memory management. This section briefly describes them.
As we have seen, many common machine learning models can be expressed as differentiable programs that input parameters and data and output a scalar loss value. The loss value measures how close the model predictions are to desired values with the given parameters. Training a model can then be seen as an optimization problem: find the parameters that minimize the loss. Typically, a gradient based optimization algorithm is used for computational efficiency: the direction in the parameter space in which the loss reduction is maximum is given by the negative gradient of the loss with respect to the parameters. Thus gradient computations take a central stage in software frameworks for machine learning. In this section I will briefly outline existing gradient computation techniques and motivate the particular approach taken by Knet.
Computation of gradients in computer models is performed by four main methods (Baydin et al. 2015):
- manual differentiation (programming the derivatives)
- numerical differentiation (using finite difference approximations)
- symbolic differentiation (using expression manipulation)
- automatic differentiation (detailed below)
Manually taking derivatives and coding the result is labor intensive, error-prone, and all but impossible with complex deep learning models. Numerical differentiation is simple: f'(x)=(f(x+\epsilon)-f(x-\epsilon))/(2\epsilon) but impractical: the finite difference equation needs to be evaluated for each individual parameter, of which there are typically many. Pure symbolic differentiation using expression manipulation, as implemented in software such as Maxima, Maple, and Mathematica is impractical for different reasons: (i) it may not be feasible to express a machine learning model as a closed form mathematical expression, and (ii) the symbolic derivative can be exponentially larger than the model itself leading to inefficient run-time calculation. This leaves us with automatic differentiation.
Automatic differentiation is the idea of using symbolic derivatives only at the level of elementary operations, and computing the gradient of a compound function by applying the chain rule to intermediate numerical results. For example, pure symbolic differentiation of \sin^2(x) could give us 2\sin(x)\cos(x) directly. Automatic differentiation would use the intermediate numerical values x_1=\sin(x), x_2=x_1^2 and the elementary derivatives dx_2/dx_1=2x_1, dx_1/dx=\cos(x) to compute the same answer without ever building a full gradient expression.
To implement automatic differentiation the target function needs to be
decomposed into its elementary operations, a process similar to
compilation. Most machine learning frameworks (such as Theano, Torch,
Caffe, Tensorflow and older versions of Knet prior to v0.8) compile
models expressed in a restricted mini-language into a computational
graph of elementary operations that have pre-defined derivatives.
There are two drawbacks with this approach: (i) the restricted
mini-languages tend to have limited support for high-level language
features such as conditionals, loops, helper functions, array
indexing, etc. (e.g. the infamous scan
operation in Theano) (ii)
the sequence of elementary operations that unfold at run-time needs to
be known in advance, and they are difficult to handle when the
sequence is data dependent.
There is an alternative: high-level languages, like Julia and Python, already know how to decompose functions into their elementary operations. If we let the users define their models directly in a high-level language, then record the elementary operations during loss calculation at run-time, the computational graph can be constructed from the recorded operations. The cost of recording is not prohibitive: The table below gives cumulative times for elementary operations of an MLP with quadratic loss. Recording only adds 15% to the raw cost of the forward computation. Backpropagation roughly doubles the total time as expected.
op | secs |
---|---|
a1=w1*x |
0.67 |
a2=w2.+a1 |
0.71 |
a3=max(0,a2) |
0.75 |
a4=w3*a3 |
0.81 |
a5=w4.+a4 |
0.85 |
a6=a5-y |
0.89 |
a7=sumabs2(a6) |
1.18 |
+recording | 1.33 |
+backprop | 2.79 |
This is the approach taken by the popular autograd Python package and its Julia
port AutoGrad.jl used
by Knet. In these implementations g=grad(f)
generates a gradient
function g
, which takes the same inputs as the function f
but
returns the gradient. The gradient function g
triggers recording
by boxing the parameters in a special data type and calls f
. The
elementary operations in f
are overloaded to record their actions
and output boxed answers when their inputs are boxed. The sequence of
recorded operations is then used to compute gradients. In the Julia
AutoGrad package, derivatives can be defined independently for each
method of a function (determined by argument types) making full use of
Julia's multiple dispatch. New elementary operations and derivatives
can be defined concisely using Julia's macro and meta-programming
facilities. See AutoGrad.jl for details.
GPUs have become indispensable for training large deep learning
models. Even the small examples implemented here run up to 17x faster
on the GPU compared to the 8 core CPU architecture we use for
benchmarking. However GPU implementations have a few potential
pitfalls: (i) GPU memory allocation is slow, (ii) GPU-RAM memory
transfer is slow, (iii) reduction operations (like sum
) can be
very slow unless implemented properly (See Optimizing Parallel
Reduction in CUDA).
Knet implements KnetArray
as a Julia data type that wraps GPU array pointers. KnetArray is
based on the more standard CudaArray with a few important
differences: (i) KnetArrays have a custom memory manager, similar to
ArrayFire, which reuse pointers garbage
collected by Julia to reduce the number of GPU memory
allocations, (ii) array ranges (e.g. a[:,3:5]
) are handled as
views with shared pointers instead of copies when possible, and (iii)
a number of custom CUDA kernels written for KnetArrays implement
element-wise, broadcasting, and scalar and vector reduction operations
efficiently. As a result Knet allows users to implement their models
using high-level code, yet be competitive in performance with other
frameworks as demonstrated in the benchmarks section.
Knet is an open-source project and we are always open to new contributions: bug reports and fixes, feature requests and contributions, new machine learning models and operators, inspiring examples, benchmarking results are all welcome. If you need help or would like to request a feature, please consider joining the knet-users mailing list. If you find a bug, please open a GitHub issue. If you would like to contribute to Knet development, check out the knet-dev mailing list and tips for developers. If you use Knet in your own work, here is a paper you can cite:
@inproceedings{knet2016mlsys, author={Yuret, Deniz}, title={Knet: beginning deep learning with 100 lines of Julia}, year={2016}, booktitle={Machine Learning Systems Workshop at NIPS 2016} }
Current contributors:
- Deniz Yuret
- Ozan Arkan Can
- Onur Kuru
- Emre Ünal
- Erenay Dayanık
- Ömer Kırnap
- İlker Kesen
- Emre Yolcu
- Meriç Melike Softa
- Ekrem Emre Yurdakul