Good afternoon, and thank you all for joining us. On the call with me is our Chief Administrative Officer and Incoming Chief Financial Officer, Brett Hale. 2022 was a year of significant technological, clinical and commercial progress for Hyperfine. I am pleased to share that we recognize $6.8 million in revenue for the full year, driven by the sale of 35 commercial Swoop systems. We also received multiple clearances for next generation hardware and software upgrades, saw our technology highlighted in 15 clinical publications and 50 peer-reviewed presentations at neurology and imaging meetings, and strengthened our existing partnerships while establishing new relationships with several types and hospital systems. In addition to these initiatives, we have right-sized our business and implemented spending discipline to extend our cash runway through 2025, including the cessation of the Liminal brain sensing program and associated position. I am very proud of what the Hyperfine team has accomplished in its first full year as a public company, a year of dynamic change internally and in the marketing. Before turning to our 2023 priorities, I would like to provide greater detail on a few of these recent achievements. First, on the R&D side, we continue to advance the field of ultra-low-field MRI and have strengthened image quality through multiple FDA cleared, AI powered software upgrades. These software upgrades enable improved image quality, greater consistency and robustness to motion across key brain imaging sequences for neurocritical care applications. In mid-2022 we also launched a partnership with Viz.ai, a leading AI-powered disease detection and intelligent care coordination platform, to continue enhancing our diagnostic imaging capabilities as we advance our mission to provide transformational, accessible and clinically relevant diagnostic imaging. This partnership will take us to pilot evaluations in a small number of key sites in 2023. Turning to our recent commercial progress, in 2022 we strengthened several key partnerships and customer relationships yielding new multi-unit contract. For example, as we shared in the fall, we received a purchase order from Kings College London for 20 commercial systems in association with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. We began delivering these units in the second half of 2022 and expect to ship the remainder of the units over the next one to two years. We also announced a signed letter of intent for seven commercial units from BJC HealthCare in St. Louis, one of the leading hospital systems in the United States. We've begun placing these units in 2022 and expect to ship the remainder over the course of 2023. I am also pleased to share that we have completed a restructuring of our U.S. sales team while reengineering our sales and clinical support processes. We have appointed new leaders in both the sales and the clinical support groups, who are focused on instituting a seamless workflow from pitch to purchase order and from purchase order to routine use. We are placing new trails with the introduction of our Swoop point of care MRI system, and we now understand the need for buy-in across multiple stakeholders with complex processes. Our fourth quarter result of $1.4 million in revenue on five commercial Swoop systems reflects learning and addressing these processes, as well as some distraction due to the restructuring and right sighting of the team and recruiting an onboarding of new talent. Our team is now substantially in place and the strongest it has ever been, lean and hungry, with the right experience and determined focus on execution. This team is coming up on the learning curve, continuing to build relationships and driving new contracts. We remain optimistic in our commercial pipeline for the future. Additionally, a part of our commitment to meeting the highest standards for data protection and information security, we're pleased to announce that our key platforms have achieved the rigorous high trust, risk based, two years certification. We believe this will streamline the information security reviews associated with contracting and hospital implementation. This brings me to our priorities for the year ahead. As we progress into 2023, we are focused on three strategic pillars; innovation, clinical evidence and commercial extension, with a strong focus in the United States. On innovation, we are entering the year with a clear roadmap of technology iterations and enhancements to continue improving image quality, as well as the provider and patient experience with Swoop. For example, we recently announced the receipt of two FDA 510(k) clearances for AI-powered software update to the Swoop system. These upgrades significantly enhanced diffusion-weighted imaging or DWI quality and increased the signal-to-noise ratio, further advancing image quality standards in this new, ultra-low field point of care MRI segment. Despite our heightened OpEx discipline and extended cash runway, we remain committed to driving innovation and have allocated a healthy budget in R&D through the next several years across new hardware, software and AI development programs. Over the course of the year ahead, we expect to receive additional clearances to further advance both image quality and usability of the Swoop system. On clinical evidence, we continue to focus on supporting the adoption of Swoop in the neurocritical care setting with plans to expand inter stroke [ph] imaging later in 2023. The company is also exploring other areas of both adult and pediatric brain imaging through research collaborations with leading institutions. The volume and breadth of presentations and publications covering Swoop’s clinical utility and cost effectiveness data is encouraging, and we are excited to continue building on this momentum. In the field of stroke, we have been seeing independent data and presentations that support Swoop’s value proposition. At the International Stroke Conference in February, we were pleased to see new data showing the potential for Swoop to provide critical brain imaging following thrombectomy in stroke patients. The presentation concluded that Swoop could be used to facilitate a post-treatment baseline for post thrombectomy stroke patients to evaluate the impact of potential changes in blood pressure and heart rate that may impact ongoing brain injury. This validation of the value of Swoop in providing imaging where conventional methods may not be available is promising. The major clinical initiative for Hyperfine in 2023 will be the Action PMR project. Action PMR is a global multicenter evaluation that will assess the use of the Swoop system in the acute Ischemic stroke use case, and we are fortunate to be working with prominent, experienced and passionate clinical teams in the field of stroke as they set up the foundation for this study. Enrolment is expected to begin in mid-2023 and we are excited to take this important step towards advancing the use of Swoop in stroke imaging. Shifting to commercial expansion, as I described earlier, we have made several changes within our commercial organization in recent months to optimize our focus towards the greatest growth opportunities for our business. First, we have refocused our team on the core U.S. market opportunity, building relationships and executing contracts with U.S. hospital systems, with a specific focus on multi-system placement opportunities. We have also made changes within our sales and clinical support teams, bringing in high performing, experienced capital equipment sales people and placing greater accountability at the sales leadership level. These teams are coming up the learning curve, working in strong collaboration to ensure increased adoption, successful implementations and to drive routine use at all of our sites, and they are now aligned and ready to execute. I look forward to seeing the progress that we will drive with existing and new customers this year and beyond. We will maintain our international footprint, which is currently small, through distributors in Canada, Australia, New