Thank you, Stacy. Reflecting on 2024 and the start of 2025 it's been a monumental time at Aurora as we near the culmination of years of innovation and preparation for our commercial launch planned in April. The word Aurora means the dawn, and we're standing at the dawn of a new era in transportation, one defined by greater safety, mobility and efficiency. Our focused strategy, grounded in safety, positioned for scale and enabled by financial discipline, continues to differentiate Aurora as the leader in autonomous trucking. We've made tremendous technological progress. We're approaching closure of the safety case for the Dallas to Houston launch lane with ARM reaching 99%, and we've also been approaching our targeted 100% API loads commercial launch estimate since mid-October. On the financial front, we've consistently demonstrated strong financial discipline, manage our cash use under budget. We also further strengthened our liquidity position with a successful capital raise last summer and ensuring we have the resources necessary to fund the initial phase of our scaling strategy. And at the start of this year, we announced a 3-way partnership between Aurora, NVIDIA and Continental, solidifying another key enabler to successfully deploy at scale. Our industry is also fortunate to have a supportive regulatory environment. Today, driverless deployment in the U.S. is already allowed by the federal government. And at the state level, under existing laws and regulations, autonomous trucks can be deployed in the vast majority of U.S. states, including our Texas launch market. We're also optimistic that the new Presidential administration's enthusiasm for innovation, safety and a nationwide framework for self-driving vehicles could further support this favorable regulatory environment for driverless deployment in the U.S. With nearly all the pieces in place, Aurora is poised for an extraordinary year ahead. Our Analyst and Investor Day in March 2024 marked a defining moment for the investors who have supported our development journey. We gave them a chance to experience driverless truck rides and a first look at how our driverless trucks navigate advanced road scenarios at our test track. I'll never forget walking up to the track with our investors and analysts seeing the truck speed by entirely driverless. At that moment, Aurora's vision became clear for everyone. As we approach the final steps of development, we're just months away from starting our commercial journey and making our vision a reality. We plan to launch our first driverless trucks hauling customer loads between Dallas and Houston in April. In order to commence driverless operations, we must first close the safety case for the Dallas and Houston launch lane. Our safety case framework is a comprehensive evidence-based approach to confirming that our self-driving vehicles are acceptably safe to operate on public roads. We quantify our progress toward closing our Dallas Houston Launch Lane safety case through the arm, a weighted measure of completeness across all claims of the safety case for our launch lane. We remain the only company in the industry that has provided this level of transparency. As of the end of January, ARM was 99%, up from 97% at the end of October, driven by the closure of a number of software claims. We've made meaningful progress on final behavior refinement and validation and expect to complete the remaining elements of our safety case over the next several weeks. Let's take a look at our rare Surface Street scenario we just recently encountered in Houston. In the video, on Page 5 of our presentation, the Aurora Driver comes upon a large funeral procession, an unpredictable and complex scenario. As the truck approaches the intersection, the Aurora Driver detects a police motorcycle directing traffic at an uncontrolled intersection, which could potentially block the truck's lane. It slows its speed as it prepares to stop and requests input from a remote assistance specialist. Importantly, given our system architecture and strict security protocols, our trucks cannot be operated by remote assistance specialists. All driving tasks can only be executed on board. Within seconds, the remote assistant specialist sees the police officers just blocking cross traffic and not the trucks lane and confirms the Aurora Driver should proceed. With the detection of the active police motorcycle at sufficient distance and rapid remote systems response, the Aurora Driver powered truck was able to continue on its journey without stopping. Adeptly handing scenarios like this helps reinforce our confidence that the Aurora Driver will behave appropriately even in the rarest Surface Street scenarios and the successful interaction with our remote assistance specialist underscores the power of the complete systems performance. Turning to rare construction scenarios. The Aurora Driver is also delivering impressive performance. In the video on Page 6, an Aurora Driver powered truck encounters an upcoming construction zone warning. It lane changes to the left to prepare for the lane closure ahead and then seamlessly navigates a highly complex traffic crossover. As you'll see, this type of configuration redirects traffic to the opposite side of the road, bypassing the work zone with lane separated by barriers and marked with cones. This is a great example of truly skillful performance of known construction zones. Once fully clear of the construction zone, the Aurora Driver returns to its preferred right-hand lane and continues its journey. Strong performance in these types of scenarios support our solid API results. API is another key metric we use to assess the Aurora Drivers performance and commercial readiness. The indicator penalizes the use of on-site support, which will be the most expensive support provided to enable the Aurora Driver. We're focused on driving up the percentage of commercial loads that did not require any form of on-site support, which we refer to as 100% API loads. As a reminder, we do not anticipate that aggregate API will ever reach 100% and even at launch because certain situations will always require on-site support. However, we believe the percentage of 100% and API loads is a strong indicator of our progress and expect this metric to reach approximately 90% by commercial launch. We've been approaching 90% since mid-October, Specific to the fourth quarter, excluding the first two weeks, 88% of loads at 100% API with many weeks exceeding our commercial launch estimate of 90%. This puts us in a strong position for our planned launch in April. During launch, we expect to operate up to 10 trucks commercially starting with one driverless truck and then transitioning the balanced driverless operation. We're deliberately starting with this crawl-walk-run approach as our early efforts will be focused on exercising the full product suite to ensure a seamless launch while demonstrating the value proposition for our customers and continuing to build trust with all of our stakeholders. In the second half of 2025, we'll focus on expanding our product capabilities to include night driving and rainy conditions. Beginning our lane expansion strategy with driverless operations on the Fort Worth to El Paso lane with further extension to Phoenix and increasing capacity of tens of trucks by the end of the year. Growing demand for autonomous trucking underscores the critical role the Aurora Driver will play in addressing industry challenges. As freight volumes continue to increase and shipping distance expands, the rare driver is uniquely positioned to help solve staffing shortages and enable more productive and efficient transport. Aurora Driver powered trucks operating at high levels of autonomy are already achieving best-in-class fuel efficiency, 15% above the industry average. This isn't just a marginal improvement. It's a clear example of how autonomy can deliver tangible value in fuel saving and sustainability. As we work with customers and more deeply integrate the Aurora Driver with their operations, we see the potential to reduce fuel use and emissions by up to 32%, as we discussed in our sustainability white paper published last year. This will help the industry reduce emissions and bring down operating costs. This is just one example of how the Aurora Driver is meeting today's challenges and shaping the future of freight transport. With a mutual focus on sustainable operations guided by safety, Aurora and Volvo Autonomous Solutions, or VAS, continue to make significant progress in our partnership. During the fourth quarter, together with VAS, we launched pilot operations with DHL Supply Chain with the purpose-built Volvo VNL Autonomous powered by the Aurora Driver. We're initially hauling DHL Freight on two lanes, Dallas to Houston and Fort Worth to El Paso. We also continue to autonomously haul freight for our other pilot customers, including FedEx, Werner, Schneider, Hirschbach, Uber Freight and others. Cumulative to date, we have autonomously delivered under the supervision of vehicle operators more than 9,500 loads, driving over 2.6 million commercial miles with nearly 100% on-time performance for our pilot customers. We're also excited to have recently executed an MOU with JB Hunt. As we prepare for commercial launch, we continue to run our Partner Success program, which gives customers the opportunity to more deeply evaluate and assess the Aurora Drive's performance as a final step to move forward with driverless operations. Hirschbach recently evaluated our system, leveraging the expertise of some of their most seasoned professional drivers who collectively represent over 75 years of on-road experience. These drivers have logged millions of miles and have seen everything in the road can throw at them. So understandably, they came into the program with a bit of skepticism. But during their rides, they were blown away by the Aurora Drivers performance and in turn, Hirschbach is ready to go driverless when we are ready. For me, it was awesome to hear how experienced truck drivers get it about what this technology can mean for their industry. You can hear from these drivers firsthand in the video on Page 8 of our presentation. Their shared belief in how autonomous and traditional trucks can work hand-in-hand to improve road safety and transform freight transportation is a true testament to Aurora's mission. Since our founding, our objective has been to deploy self-driving technology at scale our OEM and Tier 1 partnerships with Volvo Trucks, PACCAR and Continental are unmatched in the industry, and we believe position Aurora is the only company capable of deploying autonomous trucking at scale. As I mentioned at the beginning of the call, in January, we further enhanced this ecosystem with a 3-way partnership between Aurora and NVIDIA, my apologies, and Continental solidifying another key enabler to successfully deploy at scale. NVIDIA's DRIVE Thor system-on-a-chip will be integrated into the Aurora Driver hardware kit that Continental plans to mass manufacture starting in 2027. And production samples of DRIVE Thor are coming in the first half of 2025 to start testing. DRIVE Thor will be the core of the primary computer for the Aurora Driver, which we're developing with Continental who will manufacture it. We also continue to make meaningful progress on other aspects of this generation of the hardware kit. During the fourth quarter, we completed the integration of our FirstLight LiDAR chip into a single photonics engine. Notably, the prototype performance is meeting our requirements for our next-generation LiDAR. And in January, Continental and Euro achieved another partnership milestone and are now beginning a sample builds and firmware development. The significant progress we're making towards this generation of hardware is critical as it will unlock true scale on the order of tens of thousands of trucks. While we work toward Continental start of production in 2027, our third-generation commercial kit. We also continue to advance our second-generation commercial hardware kit. We plan to introduce this kit later this year to support our ambitions to scale to hundreds of millions of miles traveled autonomously. This generation brings exciting performance gains. And importantly, we expect it to drive a step function reduction in our hardware costs, which is a critical element on our path to self-funding. During the fourth quarter, we received eight samples from our contract manufacturer, Fabrinet and have integrated this prototype kit into its first vehicle for testing. Aurora has always been a mission-driven company with an immensely capable team, bold enough to dream big and skilled enough to make those dreams a reality. We're on the cusp of our planned commercial launch, a pivotal step toward realizing our mission and our team is more focused and energized than ever with a team like ours impossible becomes achievable. Our extraordinary progress would not be possible without the unwavering commitment from our team, partners and investors. Thank you for your trust. We believe 2025 will be a defining year for Aurora as we begin to reshape the future of freight. With that, I'll now pass it over to Dave who will review our financial results.