Thank you, Al. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. By way of introduction, I'm Catherine Owen-Adams, and it's an honor to be speaking with you as the new CEO of Acadia. I want to take a few moments to share a little about my background and how it aligns with Acadia's goals and explain why I felt so drawn to join Acadia. So, begin, I have over 30 years of experience in the pharmaceutical industry. Most recently, serving as senior vice president and general manager of the U.S. business at Bristol Myers Squibb, and prior to that, leading their international major markets business. Before that, I spent 25 years at Johnson & Johnson, working in both their pharma and med tech businesses in the EU and U.S. Throughout my career, I've led teams that have successfully launched and managed drugs across many therapeutic areas, including rare disease and neurology. In the last five years, I've had the privilege of being involved in nine drug launches in the U.S. and internationally, including a number of successful rare disease launches. I joined Acadia because I was excited by the foundational business and the future potential of the pipeline. I'm both inspired and humbled to have the opportunity to lead Acadia in advancing therapies that can make a real difference in people's lives. As I look toward that future, I see incredible opportunities ahead to grow our current portfolio and advance the innovations in our pipeline, including two late stage assets serving new communities of patients with high unmet medical needs. I see significant potential to enhance shareholder values as we continue to execute and evolve our commercial priorities and advance our pipeline assets. Please turn to Slide 5, where I will elaborate a little on each of these areas and underline why I chose to join Acadia against our three core pillars. First, on the commercial front, we have two growing franchises, which together, based on our Q3 results, are now tracking to over $1 billion in annualized sales, an extraordinary milestone for a biotech company of our size. Second, our robust pipeline includes two late stage assets in Prader-Willi Syndrome and Alzheimer's disease psychosis, complemented by many promising early stage programs. And third, our financial strength is fueled by our positive cash flows and a growing cash balance, which now stands at $565 million. I'll now briefly highlight our commercial and R&D pillars before handing off to our leaders, who will dive deeper into the details. Turning now to Slide 6, beginning with DAYBUE, where we've had another solid quarter generating sales of $91.2 million, up 36% year-over-year and 8% sequentially. I'd like to take this opportunity to share some high-level observations on DAYBUE, based on my experience with multiple DAYBUE launches, and to give some context for our launch results to date. Six quarters in, with $429 million generated in sales, I think we can say this has been a successful launch. Every rare disease launch is unique, but I have observed some key commonalities with DAYBUE. They are complex, highly situational, and involve coordination of lots of moving parts within the healthcare system. Especially important is the focus on the patient's journey, both to start and stay on therapy. And concentrating on how this journey is fully supported. We've reached a steady state of new patient starts with DAYBUE, and have strengthened our focus on growing this in the next several quarters. This will take time, and growth will be driven by continuing to lean in to the breadth of our clinical data, illustrating and describing for HCPs the impact DAYBUE has on patients, bringing to life the scoring systems used in clinical trials, and generating real-world experience and insights from our ongoing local studies. We will also continue to focus on the early part of the patient's journey, as families and doctors work together to find the dose for their child. I'm extremely confident about the potential for DAYBUE growth, and further penetration beyond our series, into the diagnosed patients who can benefit from its impact, both in the U.S. and beyond. I'll now turn to NUPLA