Thank you, Matthijs and good morning, everyone. The first quarter non-GAAP adjusted gross profit was $101 million or 46% gross margin compared to $94 million or 46% gross margin in the first quarter of 2022. For the quarter, adjusted gross margins were up sequentially over 100 basis points and flat year-over-year. This outcome was better than our expectations and represents strong execution by our teams to achieve this result. This achievement puts us on a solid track to achieving a full year goal of expanding gross margins by 100 basis points. Moving on to operating expenses; R&D expenses were roughly $23 million or approximately 10% of sales. The first quarter SG&A expenses were $41 million or roughly 19% of sales. Overall, operating expenses as a percent of sales were up sequentially in the quarter as a result of the impact of variable compensation programs and the seasonal payroll taxes as well as the increased R&D investments. Adjusted EBITDA was approximately $47 million in the first quarter of 2023 or 21% adjusted EBITDA margin versus $44 million in the prior year. On the tax front, our non-GAAP tax rate in the first quarter of 2023 was 12%. This differed from the statutory rate due to jurisdictional mix of income and the seasonal impact of equity compensation windfall benefits. Our non-GAAP adjusted earnings per share was $0.74 in the quarter compared to $0.73 in the first quarter of 2022. While adjusted EBITDA grew in the high single-digit range, EPS was muted due solely to higher interest expense. First quarter cash flow was approximately $7 million which was up 28% versus the prior year. As previously mentioned and communicated, the first quarter typically has a lower cash flow due to the timing of incentive compensation payments, equity compensation, vesting events and the timing of seasonal tax payments. We expect cash flows to continue to improve during the rest of the year as we gradually bring down our inventory to more historical levels and continue to drive strong profitability. We ended the quarter with gross debt of $428 million and our gross leverage ratio was 2.3x. Our net debt was $345 million, putting the company in a great position to fund further acquisitions. Now, I'll turn to the updated performance of our operating segments. As Matthijs mentioned, we did change the names of our reporting segments in the quarter. We renamed Photonics segment Precision Medicine and Manufacturing, our Vision segment is now renamed to Medical Solutions and our Precision Motion segment is now renamed to Robotics and Automation. I'll start by sharing details about Precision Medicine and Manufacturing segment, formerly known as Photonics. For the first quarter of 2023, revenue grew 11% year-over-year. This segment continues to experience very strong customer demand in the traditional medical applications and the planned uptick in next-generation DNA sequencing. The book-to-bill in this segment was 1.06 in the quarter, again, driven by strong demand in our medical markets and resilient demand from multiple industrial applications focused on productivity enhancing equipment in the manufacturing floor. In the quarter, bookings in this segment were up 28% and roughly flat year-over-year. The strength in orders puts us in a strong position with good backlog coverage for the remainder of 2023. Within Precision Medicine and Manufacturing, new product revenue stayed strong at greater than 20% of sales in the first quarter. Our sales teams continue to win excellent new business in attractive high-growth medical industrial applications, winning new content, winning new customers and winning in new applications. Design wins in this segment were down year-over-year but this was really driven by timing, particularly around the new wins in our intelligent light engine subsystem business branded as Laser Quantum. For the full year, we expect solid design win growth year-over-year. The Precision Medicine and Manufacturing segment adjusted gross margin was 50% in the quarter which was up nearly 400 basis points year-over-year. This is a great outcome and reflects the efforts and successes this team is having in deploying the Novanta growth system deep into the organization and overcoming some of the operational supply chain challenges they experienced in the prior year. Turning to our Medical Solutions segment, formerly known as Vision; this segment saw reported revenue growth of 25% year-over-year which was stronger than expectations. Growth in this segment continues to be driven by strength in elective surgical procedures and continued success in our first-generation smoke evacuation insufflator technology as well as our JADAK business, where the business continues to catch up from past due backlog after supply chain challenges of 2022. The JADAK business is also seeing solid demand in new science, life science equipment applications. The Medical Solutions segment saw a book-to-bill of 1.03 in the first quarter with bookings up 7% sequentially and 12% year-over-year, further indicating the building demand we see in this end market. The vitality index in this segment reduced versus prior year. As Matthijs mentioned, this is largely driven by first-generation smoke evacuation insufflator products reaching its 4-year milestone and so we are no longer tracking it as part of our official vitality index. As a result, this segment had a vitality index in the mid-teens in the first quarter which was in line with our expectations. We expect this metric to stay at this level for 2023 but increase thereafter as we launch multiple new second-generation smoke evacuation insufflators which will start to have a significant impact on our sales in the coming years. Design win activity in this segment also declined in the first quarter year-over-year solely from very difficult comparisons from the record-breaking design win progress in 2022 from our second-generation smoke evacuation products. Finally, turning to Robotics and Automation segment, formerly known as Precision Motion. This segment experienced a revenue decline of 9% year-over-year in the quarter. This was in line with our expectations and prior guidance. This decline continues to be driven by steep year-over-year decline in microelectronics applications, particularly in the PCBA, via-hole whole drilling applications which declined nearly 70%. Excluding this decline, the remainder of the segment grew single digits in the quarter. This decline in PCBA drilling is causing a sales growth headwind for overall Novanta of approximately 200 to 300 basis points in the full year. The overall book-to-bill ratio in this segment was approximately 0.8, again driven by the microelectronics decline in exposure. Microelectronics experienced a negligible level of bookings in the quarter. New product revenue was roughly 10% of sales for this segment in the quarter. This ratio is lower than prior year because it now includes product sales from our ATI business lines which had minimum new products in its revenue and therefore is having a dampening effect on the overall segment ratio. However, as we mentioned in the fourth quarter, we are working hard on ramping the new product development in this business and we expect to launch multiple new products in this business in the second half of this year. Adjusted gross margins for the segment came in at $47.5 million with -- 47.5% which was down year-over-year and down sequentially. This is again being driven by the sharp downturn in factory output caused by the decline in the microelectronics market. We expect margins to recover in this segment as the year progresses, both as we manage our cost structure and as other productivity gains gain further traction. Now, turning to guidance. As Matthijs mentioned, we expect to see order behavior from our customers returning to historical patterns as our product lead times drop. Our prior lead times have been as high as 12 months or more and we are seeing them come down to 1/4 of that level in many cases which is closer to our historical lead times. We do not see this having any impact on our sales growth outlook for the quarter or for the full year. And the strength of our backlog is a reflection of our innovations and the applications in which we participate, with strong demand signals still represented in the larger application areas. From an end market perspective, we see similar dynamics in the second quarter as we did in the first quarter. We expect demand in our medical end markets to remain very strong and we see solid growth coming from our medical capital equipment and medical consumable sales. In our advanced industrial end market, we expect our traditional industrial end markets to stay resilient in the second quarter but with the continued moderation that we saw in the first quarter, in line with the overall macroeconomic and industrial spending environment. We continue to expect our continued disciplined focus on secular growth applications and new product introductions to allow our business to experience growth and weather a more uncertain macroeconomic environment. In our microelectronics end market, we expect continued double-digit declines in the PCBA via-hole drilling applications year-over-year and also some declines in semiconductor wafer fab equipment. As mentioned before, this end application will continue to be a revenue headwind for Novanta in the second quarter in a similar magnitude as we experienced in the first quarter. So starting with revenue guidance; for the second quarter of 2023, we stand here today with GAAP revenue in the range of $222 million to $225 million which represents revenue growth in the mid-single-digit territory on a year-over-year basis. If you exclude the impact of the microelectronics headwinds, our revenue growth in the second quarter would be low double digit. On a segment level, in the second quarter, we expect Precision Medicine and Manufacturing segment to grow revenue in the 6% to 8% range on a year-over-year basis. Customer demand remains resilient in this segment with continued growth in multiple medical and industrial applications, including DNA sequencing, ophthalmology and micromachining. Our Robotics and Automation segment is expected to be flat sequentially and down approximately 10% year-over-year. The year-over-year decline is driven by the downturn in the microelectronics market. Excluding the microelectronics decline, this segment will be growing from demand in industrial robots, medical robots, electric vehicles and battery production applications. Finally, on Medical Solutions. The segment is expected to demonstrate revenue growth in the 18% to 22% range in the second quarter and is expected to be up sequentially as well. Medical end markets continue to be very strong driven by a return of elective surgical procedures globally. Moving on to overall Novanta's adjusted gross margin. We expect gross margin in the second quarter to be approximately 46% to 46.5% which is up sequentially and will continue to demonstrate good expansion year-over-year. The Precision Medicine and Manufacturing segment gross margin is expected to be flat sequentially, whereas the Robotics and Automation segment is expected to be up sequentially. The Medical Solutions segment is expected to see gross margins slightly down sequentially due to a higher mix of medical consumables sales. We believe our team's efforts to use the Novanta growth system will help us sustain and expand gross margins as we progress deeper into the year. Turning to R&D and SG&A expenses. They are expected to be approximately $65 million to $66 million. The increase in cost year-over-year and sequentially is driven by labor cost increases tied to our annual cycle, further investments in innovation, particularly investments in our Medical Solutions segment tied to the aforementioned development of our second-generation smoke evacuation insufflator products and some further investments in our commercial engine. Depreciation expense which was about $4 million in the first quarter, will be about the same in the second quarter. Stock compensation expense which was over $6 million in the first quarter, will be roughly similar in the second quarter. For adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter of 2023, we expect a range of $47 million to $49 million. Interest expense which was over $6 million in the first quarter, is expected to be about $7 million in the second quarter of 2023, driven by the continued rise in interest rates. We continue to focus on paying down the debt to mitigate the impact of rising rates. We expect our non-GAAP tax rate to be around 18% for the second quarter. The sequential rise in the tax rate from 12% to 18% is driven by our expectations around jurisdictional mix of income as well as timing caused by our first quarter equity compensation windfall benefits. It should be noted that the tax rates across a variety of geographical regions have increased and hence we're working to minimize the impact to Novanta. But clearly, rates will be a little higher than 2022. Diluted weighted average shares outstanding will be approximately 36 million shares. For adjusted diluted earnings per share, we expect a range of $0.70 to $0.74 in the second quarter. And we expect cash flows to improve sequentially due in part to the seasonal effects mentioned previously and from our continued efforts to bring down our inventory levels. We are also continuing to invest in manufacturing facility expansion projects, such as our new Taunton optics facility, our new Manchester optical subsystem manufacturing facility and our new Czech Republic Medical consumables manufacturing facility. These investments are all critical to support our growth outlook for the next several years. As always, this guidance does not assume any significant changes to foreign exchange rates. In summary, Novanta's performance in the first quarter of 2023 was excellent. We beat our own expectations and the guidance for sales growth, for margins and for profit performance. We saw tremendous growth in our medical end markets which more than offset a known headwind in microelectronics. This dynamic is yet another testament of the balance and resiliency of this business portfolio. Our teams continue to deliver great results, helping the company work through a difficult operating environment while still winning new customer platforms and progressing our innovation pipeline. And we continue to see great success at attracting and retaining top talent. Despite a more uncertain macroeconomic environment, the higher interest rate environment, we believe we're on track to achieving our outlook for the full year of 2023 and we see our growth remaining strong well past this year on the back of exciting new product launches starting later this year. We remain very grateful to the outstanding performance of our employees and their tireless efforts to help us be successful in this dynamic environment. We look forward to continuing to deliver on our commitments to our employees, our customers and our shareholders. This concludes the prepared remarks. We'll now open the call for questions.