Thanks, Michelle, and thank you to everyone joining us today on Helius Medical's fourth quarter 2023 and earnings conference call. I'm happy to report that during 2023 and over the past few months, we've taken several meaningful steps towards two important milestones in the United States, achieving widespread reimbursement for PoNS and FDA approval for stroke. I'll start with our pursuit of broad reimbursement for PoNS. As you know, PoNS is currently authorized in the United States to treat gait deficit due to mild-to-moderate symptoms from MS. We are thrilled that CMS recently assigned us unique HCPCS codes for both PoNS controller and the PoNS mouthpiece effective April 1st, 2024. These codes allow us to begin negotiating reimbursement with third-party payers and gives us the option to submit claims on a case-by-case basis. We now expect to engage with CMS in the coming weeks and at the public meeting this summer with the objective of securing Medicare reimbursement for the PoNS controller and mouthpiece in their next cycle. If we are successful, reimbursement will be effective October 1st, 2024. To further support our reimbursement efforts, we anticipate getting primary endpoint data from PoNS step during the third quarter with preliminary study results communication before year-end. As a reminder, PoNS step is a company-sponsored research trial designed to evaluate the impact of MS patient adherence to PoNS Therapy in a real-world clinical setting. We expect data from this program to underscore the effectiveness of PoNS in treating gait imbalance impairment as well as its long-term therapeutic benefit. Recently, we initiated efforts to target the Department of Veterans Affairs through their nationwide multiple sclerosis centers of excellence, the VA provides healthcare services to veterans with MS from the time of diagnosis and through the rest of their lives, and more than 28,000 cases are reported to the VA annually, fact to establish a partnership with an authorized supplier to the VA in the near future. Now on to the achievements we made towards our goal of securing U.S. commercial authorization for stroke. In the U.S., over 5 million stroke survivors are affected by walking and balanced disability and falling is a prevailing concern for stroke survivors. Clinical evidence out of Canada shows that patients treated with PoNS Therapy see substantial improvement in gait imbalance. Furthermore, in the real-world database analysis, the majority of the patients before starting PoNS Therapy were at risk of falling. While routine rehabilitation physical therapy provides about a 1% to 3% reduction in risk remarkably after 14 weeks of treatment with PoNS Therapy, 28% of the patients were no longer at fall risk. This is a clinically meaningful and impactful improvement. Fall related events are dangerous to the patient, resulting in additional injuries and new or lengthened hospital stays, which presents a significant financial burden to the healthcare system with the average treatment cost per fall estimated at $64,500. If you compare that to the number to our list price of PoNS system at $25,700, the health economic equation greatly favors the use of PoNS. With PoNS Therapy, we have a huge opportunity to improve the lives of patients suffering from stroke will also helping to reduce the considerable fall-related economic burden to providers, which totals an estimated of $50 billion per year. In Canada, where PoNS is already authorized for stroke, the government and providers are already starting to see the clinical and economic benefit of PoNS. Early in the fourth quarter, we received a letter of intent from the Quebec Ministry of Health and Social Services to purchase 30 PoNS devices. We are currently working to establish five sites in five separate administrative regions as part of a government-funded initiative designed to further validate the effectiveness of PoNS Therapy when used by patients suffering the effects of stroke. We believe this program will not only accelerate adoption in Canada, but will also increase the body of therapeutic evidence toward our pursuit of market access and third-party coverage here in the United States. Also critical to achieving market access is our ongoing investigator-initiated placebo-controlled study by Dr. Steven Kautz at the Medical University of South Carolina, which evaluates the effects of cranial nerve, non-invasive neuromodulation delivered using PoNS Therapy on gait and dynamic balance in chronic stroke survivors. We also began an open-label study as part of our registrational program, raising the total number of participants between the two studies to approximately 100. In January, Brooks Rehabilitation Hospital joined the program as a second site to Dr. Kautz's study and is now also the first site to have start enrolling patients in the open-label study. We believe that bringing PoNS clinical experience to additional sites in the U.S. through the open-label study will further support our stroke authorization efforts. We also recently aligned with the FDA on our stroke development plan. Through this plan, we could leverage the randomized controlled study at MUSC as part of the registrational program, along with the open-label study and real-world evidence from Canada to significantly streamline the size, time line in the cost of the registrational program. A more efficient path to approval is great news, not only for Helius, but also for the millions of stroke survivors in the U.S., who could benefit from PoNS Therapy. We are targeting regulatory submission by early 2025 with the goal of receiving marketing authorization utilizing PoNS breakthrough designation in stroke later in the same year. If authorized to treat stroke in the U.S., PoNS would be eligible for the proposed Transitional Coverage of Emerging Technologies, or TCET pathway, which would expedite Medicare coverage of certain breakthrough – certain breakthrough devices and allow for temporary coverage within six months after FDA market authorization. An estimated 90% of stroke patients in the U.S. are covered by Medicare. Turning now to our Canadian activities. Early in the fourth quarter, Pacific Blue Cross and HealthTech Connex published a white paper demonstrating PoNS Therapy can drastically improve return-to-work outcomes for patients suffering from traumatic brain injury, or TBI. The program participants included patients that at least two years post injury, who did not respond to standard rehabilitation treatments and were not expected to return-to-work. After 14 weeks of PoNS Therapy, 89% of the study participants said that balancing gait was no longer a barrier to work. 56% return-to-work, and 80% of those who returned were able to work full time at their prior occupations for at least six months. As you can imagine, these were incredibly gratifying results. PoNS Therapy is truly a game-changer for people suffering from gaining balance impairment, and we are optimistic that the findings from this white paper will advance our efforts to gain reimbursement by Canadian insurance companies and health care providers as well as demonstrating PoNS significant health economic benefit and cost-effectiveness as we negotiate coverage with U.S. payers. As you've heard today, we see several upcoming milestones on the path ahead and expect 2024 to be another year of marching steadily toward our goals. With $1.3 million raised under our ATM program since year-end, our cash runway has been extended into the third quarter of this year, allowing us to continue pursuing widespread reimbursement while making progress on stroke. With that, let me turn the call over to Jeff to discuss our fourth quarter financial results in detail.