Thank you, Branislav, and thanks to everyone joining us today. Turning to recent milestones. Our landmark study based on our novel VECG technology was published in JAK Advances, a journal of the American College of Cardiology. This per reviewed study demonstrated the ability of Hartbeam's VECG technology platform to detect the presence of coronary artery occlusion. This is a very interesting study design that use balloon inflation during a stent procedure also called a percutaneous coronary intervention, or PCI, to simulate coronary occlusions. Heartbeam's technology and a standard 12-Lead ECG were both tested for their ability to detect coronary occlusions. There are three main takeaways from the study. First, on the left, Heartbeam's technology matched the performance of a standard in-hospital 12-lead ECG with similar accuracy. This in itself is important as Heartbeam's technology is intended to be used by patients outside of a healthcare institution. Second, the study showed that both for Heartbeam's technology and a standard 12-lead ECG when assessing chest pain, performance was much better when the reading was accompanied by a baseline ECG taken before the event. The area under the curve, or AUC, a measure of accuracy was 0.95 for greater when including both the symptomatic and baseline recordings. The AUC when only the symptomatic was included was much lower around 0.7. In other words, assessing payers of ECGs or VECGs, the patient's baseline plus one taken during an event can increase accuracy by more than 30%. 12 plus 12 is better than just a 12-lead ECG. And this is particularly important because Heartbeam's technology by design always includes the patients asymptomatic baseline taken when he or she is onboarded. And the final takeaway is that in practice, the Heartbeam technology could have a dramatic improvement in accuracy over a 12-lead ECG taken in an emergency room. While the heart beam technology will always have a patient's asymptomatic VECG and we'll be able to assess the pairs of readings. When a patients ECG is assessed in an emergency room, there's often no baseline. So our Heartbeam's 12 plus 12 reading could be almost 40% more accurate than a single 12-Lead ECG recording in the emergency room with the AUC increasing from 0.68 to 0.95. So when all this study demonstrates the potential that the AIMIGo system holds, and we'll be conducting additional studies focused on our 12-Lead synthesis and on the performance of the system as a whole. We believe these studies will be key to driving clinical and patient adoption. During the quarter, we were privileged to add multiple new respected industry executives and physicians to our leadership team, Board of Directors and Scientific Advisory Board. We strengthened our Board of Directors with the appointment of Dr. Michael R. Jaff, Chief Medical Officer and Vice President of Clinical Affairs, Technology and Innovation of the Peripheral Interventions division at Boston Scientific. Dr. Jaff is a renowned vascular physician and researcher, bringing a wealth of clinical and industry experience to the Board. This follows the recent additions of Ken Nelson and Mark Strome. We also made three key hires to our senior management team, Richa Gujarati joined HeartBeam as Senior Vice President of Product. Richa has over 13 years of experience collecting market-level insights and translating them into business needs for companies ranging from St. Jude and iRhythm to Apple. Her deep expertise in go-to-market strategies for health sensing technologies will be instrumental as we ready the HeartBeam AIMIGo system for market release. Debbie Castillo joined HeartBeam as Vice President of Regulatory Affairs. Debbie is an experienced Biomedical Engineer with extensive knowledge of FDA, EU and Health Canada regulations. She has experience as well and -- she has industry experience as well in various positions with the FDA. She is responsible for leading our regulatory affairs function and overseeing the company's interactions with regulatory agencies worldwide. And finally, we welcomed Pooja Chatterjee, as Vice President Clinical. She brings over 15 years of extensive clinical leadership experience in the medical device industry, most recently at Abbott, and will oversee our clinical studies and related efforts. We recently added five distinguished physicians to our Scientific Advisory Board. This group brings expertise in interventional cardiology, electrophysiology, clinical research and new technologies. The new members are Charles L. Brown III, Tony Das, Robert Harrington, Campbell Rogers and Niraj Varma. They joined our Chief Medical Officer, Peter Fitzgerald, in the previously announced Chair of the Scientific Advisory Board, Michael Gibson. I encourage you to read our press release of the appointments to get a sense of the wealth of experience at favoring. We continue to make steady progress toward our key product milestones, as previously discussed, we will have two 510(k) submissions to the FDA. The first, which we call version 1 is for clearance of the HeartBeam AIMIGo VECG device. This application, which was submitted to the FDA in May is for the hardware. Clearance is a 3-Lead VECG collection device. This submission is progressing well. We've received questions from FDA and have submitted our responses. The second submission planned for after we receive the clearance for version 1 is for the software, including the algorithms that generate a synthesized 12-Lead ECG for physician review. On this application, which we call version 2, we have held a successful pre-submission meeting with the FDA. This meeting focused on the design of the clinical study that will demonstrate the performance of our synthesized 12-Lead ECG in relation to a standard 12-lead ECC. We're encouraged by our interactions with FDA, and we continue to expect the product will be ready for limited market release during the second half of 2024. I'll now turn the call over to Rick Brounstein, Chief Financial Officer, to discuss operational updates and financials.