Thank you, Mark, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining our call today. Here at Vistagen, we are pioneering neuroscience, with an intention to deliver first-in-class therapies for psychiatric and neurological disorders, where there are few, if any, adequate and differentiated FDA-approved treatment options to satisfy the widespread needs of patients whose mental health and whose well-being are adversely affected by their disorders. Each of our clinical stage neuroscience product candidates is designed with the potential to establish new standards of care and make meaningful differences in how patients manage their disorders to improve their daily lives. Within the last few months, we've seen a renaissance in neuroscience, marked notably by pharma M&A in the neuropsychiatry space, valued at about $23 billion. We are encouraged that novel, late-stage, neuroscience-derived product candidates with differentiated safety profiles have stimulated renewed interest in large-market neuropsychiatry programs with the potential to change lives. We believe each of our clinical neuroactive pherines, led by fasedienol for the acute treatment of social anxiety disorder, is anchored in novel neuroscience and has the potential to produce differentiated product profiles across multiple and diverse large-market therapeutic areas with high need for innovation and high need to transform the standards of care, including anxiety, depression, women's health and other disorders. Today, we'll briefly discuss our progress and plans for three of these -- three of our five pherine assets in our clinical-stage neuroscience pipeline, facadienol, itruvone, and PH80. As noted, our lead clinical-stage program involves fasedienol, and it's aimed at transforming the treatment paradigm for adults affected by social anxiety disorder, or SAD, which currently affects the lives of about 10% of the US adult population, with very high opportunity costs in their daily life. While the prevalence of SAD continues to grow, there's still no FDA-approved, patient-tailored, acute treatment option to help individuals with SAD rapidly and safely address their anxiety when their stressors are upon them in their daily life. With the positive results from our PALISADE-2 Phase 3 trial reported last year, and a strong balance sheet, we're fully focused on advancing our PALISADE Phase 3 development program in SAD, with preparations to initiate this year all key remaining studies planned for that program. Since our last conference call in November, our team has been diligently focused on the preparations necessary to initiate PALISADE-3, which will be our next Phase 3 clinical trial of fasedienol for the acute treatment of anxiety in adults with social anxiety disorder. That remains on track to begin in the first half of 2024. That will be followed by PALISADE-4 to be initiated in the second half of this year. PALISADE-3 and PALISADE-4 will be similar to our successful PALISADE-2 Phase 3 trial. Both trials will involve a public speaking challenge in a clinical setting with patient reported outcomes on the Subjective Units of Distress Scale or SUDS as the primary efficacy endpoint. We believe either PALISADE-3 or PALISADE-4 if successful, together with the positive results from PALISADE-2 may establish substantial evidence of effectiveness of fasedienol in support of a potential NDA submission for the acute treatment of anxiety in adults with SAD. Last year we accomplished something that to our knowledge had never been achieved and that is to demonstrate positive Phase 3 results in an anxiety study with a drug candidate that does not need to be taken up systemically or act directly on neurons in the brain. We look forward to getting back into the clinic soon with PALISADE-3 to continue driving on our mission to deliver a first-in-class therapy in a large neuropsychiatry market in need of differentiated fast-acting therapies without the risk of sexual side effects, weight gain, or abuse liability concerns. Beyond fasedienol in our Phase 3 program in SAD we are continuing to explore various ways to unlock the significant potential of itruvone asset as a differentiated new therapy for major depressive disorder or MDD. Preparations and planning for potential US Phase 2B trial of itruvone model therapy in MDD are ongoing. Again our mission in this large and unfortunately increasing neuropsychiatry market is to deliver a differentiated therapy to transform the standard of care without the risk of sexual side effects, weight gain or abuse liability concerns. We also see great potential in our rapid onset hormone-free PHAD nasal spray. Its potential is anchored in the previously unreported positive results from two trials in women's health indications that we announced last year. First is a treatment for vasomotor symptoms or hot flashes due to menopause and next, for the management of premenstrual dysphoric disorder or PMDD. PHAD showed statistically significant results in both studies. We are preparing to conduct non-clinical studies necessary to submit a USIND to facilitate further Phase 2 clinical development of PHAD for women's health indications including the treatment of patients with moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms or hot flashes that are due to menopause. I'll now turn the call over to our CFO, Cindy Anderson to summarize some of the highlights from our financial results for the third quarter of our fiscal '24. Cindy?