Thanks, Jason, and thanks, everyone for joining our third quarter conference call. I'm excited to be speaking to you in my new role with SWK. This has been a productive past few months for the SWK team, and I look forward to sharing our progress. However, before doing so, I want to thank our Board for helping to ensure a successful leadership transition. And I also want to thank my predecessor, Winston Black, who has left SWK in a strong position. Winston is a longtime friend and [indiscernible] mentor. I'm grateful for this opportunity to build on the foundation he's left. I'd like to start with an overview of how I see the current business as well as a vision of where we are going. SWK's mission is to be the partner of choice for small to midsized life science companies seeking non-dilutive financing to fuel the development and commercialization of important lifesaving technologies. Since 2012, SWK has completed transactions with nearly 50 parties, funding almost $700 million. We think the results and the numbers produced over the past decade demonstrate that we are fishing in an attractive pond. Our focus is financing in the $5 billion to $25 million range, and we have created a niche and non-name-brand [ph] sponsored situations, a memory competitive field. We also focus on smaller off-the-road royalties, while most larger competitors gravitate towards Tier 1 high-profile royalties. We believe and think the numbers demonstrate that the returns in this segment are highly attractive. SWK targets a low to mid-teens return on our financings. During the third quarter, our effective yield was 14.3%, while our realized yield was 17.5%. We believe these returns are at the high end of our comp group. Our sweet spot has been and remains financings in the $7.5 million to $15 million range. However, in the third quarter, we closed 225 million financings with larger borrowers, demonstrating that our platform is valuable to companies on the larger end of our target range. I think about the value of SWK in two buckets. The first bucket is our financial and balance sheet assets. And the second bucket is our intangible assets. I think our financial assets are somewhat obvious to all, and you can certainly review these in the press release in the marketing deck. The first is our existing portfolio of yielding finance receivables and other tangible book value assets, and this is about $19.14 a share. The second is our deferred tax asset, which is on our books for $1.45 a share. And the third is our insurance [ph] assets, which are on our books for just over $1 a share. What may not be as apparent to everyone is the intangible assets that SWK has built over the past decade. The first of these is a highly motivated and skilled team. Our corporate team currently is six, which will increase to seven next week, and we anticipate adding a couple of additional investment professionals in 2023. While the team isn't large, the team does possess the skill set specific to succeed in our market vertical. The second intangible asset is our reputation as a trusted partner. More partners and real sources know SWK will do what we say we will do and do sell in a timely fashion. They also know that we'll treat our partners with respect. And this hasn't taken years to build. It is an asset that we protect. The third intangible asset is an extensive proprietary deal sourcing via our network of executives, Board members, intermediaries, co-lenders and former deal partners. This network also can provide references for potential borrowers. And fourth, we have a strong underlying track record with a 20% IRR and 1.4 times MOIC on 30 exits. Looking ahead, our leadership team is energized to build upon these valuable assets as we seek to scale our platform and drive per share value. We will do this while maintaining underwriting discipline and always with an eye to protecting and growing our shareholders' capital. The good news is, we don't have to reinvent the wheel and can utilize a tried and true path. In the near term, we need to scale the platform. To facilitate this, we are evaluating added leverage to our balance sheet, and we will do this in a responsible fashion and being mindful to our particular financing assets. While we are flexible and will consider various structures, the path of least resistance to add leverage will have two steps. The first is we need to upsize our existing ABL. Our current $22 million ABL is too small for SWK, and we're working with our existing lender to address this, and we hope to have an update on this by year-end. The second step would be to explore an unsecured bonds. As a reminder, earlier this year, we filed an S3 in anticipation of exploring this path. The bond market has clearly softened since we made that filing. But based on recent specialty finance bond offerings and considering our asset yields, we continue to think this is an attractive alternative. We will need to receive our secured lenders approval to issue a bond. Adding appropriate amount of leverage has multiple benefits. First, we will improve our return on equity, which is a metric closely linked to how financial equities trade as a percent of both value. And secondly, the additional capital allows us to pursue more financings, which helped develop the SWK team and our ecosystem. So in the near term, bring on leverage, deploy it and increase our ROE. In the medium term, we're also exploring a third-party asset management strategy. Many allocators as well as generalist credit funds find our life science niche attractive and they like the means of allocating capital to the space. SWK has a platform, know-how and track record that is valued. We are in the early stages of exploring what might be possible here and anything we do will require finding the right partner and, of course, we will need to benefit our shareholders. We have taken an initial concrete depth on this strategy by hiring a firm to audit our full investment track record. These initiatives are focused on driving SWK's value per share, which is our North Star. One way we can augment this metric is more capital allocation and, in particular, repurchasing stock at attractive valuations. During the third quarter, we repurchased over 34,000 shares at a $17.49 average cost via our 10b5 program. We've also been buying back stock post the quarter -- post the quarter close. It’s important that our shareholders know, we have a sophisticated board which balances the return that can be achieved by buying back stock with return from making additional loans and royalties. We don't focus on the stock price on a day-to-day basis, but over a reasonable period of time, the Board and Management Team want the stock price to reflect the value of our assets and platforms. Given SWK's strong foundation as well as a clear path to scaling the platform and driving shareholder returns, you can understand why the team is energized by the opportunity presented to us. While our portfolio companies are not immune to the current economic and capital market challenges, our outlook for the remainder of 2022 and into 2023 is optimistic. We are in communication with our existing portfolio companies to ensure they have adequate liquidity and are not in denial about the challenging environment. However, we are also playing offense and targeting several financing opportunities, as the ongoing market volatility makes our non-dilutive structures attractive to companies in need of capital. With that, I would like to turn the call to our new CFO, Yvette Heinrichson, for an update on our financial performance for the quarter. I've worked closely with Yvette for several years and excited to see her promoted to CFO. It’s a well deserved promotion and I'm confident our financial and accounting functions are in great hands. SWK and our shareholders will benefit from initiatives that Yvette is spearheading, including optimizing our capital structure and streamlining processes required to support financial receivables growth. With that, I'll turn the call over to you.