Thank you, Mark, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining our call. We had a very productive quarter. As many of you know, we are developing a new class of intranasal product candidates that are called pherines. These are designed to harness the power and the potential of nose-to-brain neurocircuitry to achieve a broad and diverse range of therapeutic benefits without requiring systemic absorption or binding to neurons in the brain. Let me start by discussing our most advanced pherine, PH94B (also known as fasedienol), and our ongoing registration-directed Palisade Phase 3 program for that asset for the acute treatment of social anxiety disorder or SAD. Currently, as I've mentioned before, there is no FDA-approved medication for the acute treatment of SAD, which is a very serious and potentially life-threatening condition that's recognized by the FDA. Post-COVID, it is estimated to affect over 30 million adults in the US who struggle with intense and debilitating anxiety and fear of embarrassment, humiliation, and judgment when dealing with stressful social and performance situations. With fasedienol, our goal is to address this critical and long-neglected treatment gap by providing a novel, convenient, safe, and rapid-onset as-needed solution to help individuals affected by SAD face challenges in their everyday lives. In 2023, we reported positive results from our Palisade 2 Phase 3 trial of fasedienol for the acute treatment of SAD. In 2024, to build on the success of Palisade 2 in our registration-directed Phase 3 program for fasedienol, we initiated Palisade 3 and Palisade 4 as Phase 3 trials, each designed as a replicate public speaking challenge with the same primary endpoint and, in each case, an open-label extension. Today, I'm pleased to report that both Palisade 3 and Palisade 4 are currently continuing to advance towards expected top-line results later this year. In addition, we recently announced the initiation and enrollment of the first subjects in an exploratory Phase 2 repeat-dose study of fasedienol in SAD. Besides the addition of a repeat-dose arm, it is similar in design to our Phase 3 Palisade 3 and Palisade 4 studies for the acute treatment of adults with SAD, again including an open-label extension. With these studies advancing, we believe either Palisade 3 or Palisade 4, if successful, together with Palisade 2, may establish substantial evidence of the effectiveness of fasedienol in support of a potential new drug application submission to the US FDA for the acute treatment of SAD in adults. In addition to advancing our fasedienol Phase 3 program in SAD, we made progress in our development programs for itruvone as a standalone treatment for major depressive disorder and PH80 as a non-hormonal, non-systemic treatment of vasomotor symptoms or hot flashes due to menopause. Currently, we are preparing and planning for potential Phase 2b clinical development of itruvone in the US, and we are conducting customary non-clinical studies needed to plan submission of an investigational new drug application or IND to the US FDA to facilitate further Phase 2 clinical development of PH80 for menopausal hot flashes. I'm now going to turn to some other corporate highlights. We recently reported positive results from an exploratory Phase 2a trial of PH284 in cancer cachexia. PH284 is our fifth clinical-stage neurocircuitry-focused intranasal pherine product candidate with a positive efficacy signal and differentiated safety in all the studies completed to date. This recent announcement underscores the breadth and diversity of our clinical-stage pherine pipeline. With five innovative non-systemic investigational intranasal pherine product candidates, all supported by positive Phase 2 and, in the case of fasedienol, one Phase 3 positive clinical study, the clinical data and the placebo-like tolerability we've seen across all these studies give us tremendous confidence in the range, diversity, and therapeutic potential of our neuroscience pipeline. Positive studies from our five pherines with clinical data across various indications drive our optimism and confidence in the power and promise of nose-to-brain neurocircuitry and the enormous potential of our intranasal pherine pipeline. As always, we are optimistic about the potential of our product candidates to address multiple significant treatment gaps and transform standards of care to improve lives. I'll now hand it over to Cindy Anderson, our CFO, to summarize our financials from the last quarter. Cindy?