So thanks, Heather, and thank you all for joining us this morning. I'm very pleased to report that Butterfly's performing well in all areas of our business. In March of 2024, at our Investor Day, we laid-out our strategic five year-plan, outlining growth initiatives for our core and new businesses. I'm pleased to say that we've completed the first year of that five-year plan, and we're right on-track. In 2024, we delivered $82.1 million in revenue, which represented 25% top-line growth, while improving adjusted EBITDA by 42% to a loss of $38.9 million. What's just as important is we've built the foundations for key initiatives that we believe are essential to reach our overall goals. Butterfly is the leader in point of care ultrasound devices, powered by our proprietary semiconductor technology. Our digital journey that we're on is an exciting exponential growth opportunity to bring digital capabilities to the lowest cost and most accessible medical image modality ultrasound. Our vision is that every doctor and nurse in the world will have a personal butterfly imaging device, while we bring wearable ultrasound to qualifying chronic care patients who need more frequent real time care. They will use the most advanced AI tools to locate and identify abnormalities with a secure location for their data throughout their care journey. Butterfly's powerful digital ecosystem will increase access to care, help lower cost and empower all people to understand the care they need earlier. The building blocks of this opportunity are being set now, and several initiatives are in development that I'm excited to share with you later in '25. In 2024, it was a great year for Butterfly. We got our Mojo Back. The launch of iQ3 was nothing less than a resounding commercial success. iQ3 beat out 29 other products from healthcare companies who are considered for the Prix Galien Award, the highest award in healthcare for new Medtech technology. We were a Fierce 50 Award winner as well. Since its launch a year ago, our next-generation imaging technology proved to go toe to toe and win against the largest imaging companies in the world. iQ3 represented 50% of our overall 2024 sales in units and 58% of our probe revenue, delivered higher ASPs than our second generation device and was helped by an all-in hardware and software program that proved very successful. Doctors who once hesitated to choose Butterfly in the past, wanting more from image quality flocked to iQ3. Existing users upgraded to the new device. New users traded in their competitive devices. New entrants to the POCUS market chose iQ3 to start their journey. And even medical students wanted to start their education with the best, as we saw when rolling out the new student purchase options last year that some of them actually purchased iQ3. To that end, I was very pleased with the impact ScanLab had on our education efforts. ScanLab helped new students of all ages hone their ultrasound skills. It helped new users practice without access to dedicated personnel, where education and confidence, acquiring and interpreting images are a barrier to adoption, ScanLab is now proven to be an education catalyst. Another catalyst in 2024 was the publication of the University of Rochester Medical Center data on scaled health system deployment of Butterfly. Demonstrating the clinical and economic ROI. And as we look ahead, we are now leveraging these and other ROI findings to meet with hospital administrators to discuss broader implementations. Earlier this month, Butterfly convened its inaugural POCUS Innovators Forum. 60 thought leaders gathered to discuss topics like adding imaging into everyday diagnosis, the power of lung ultrasound, empowering AI, POCUS in low resourced countries and a special session on the ROI hospitals are seeing in POCUS. We were excited with all the sessions and especially pleased with the ROI session as URMC was accompanied by several other large institutions who were able to demonstrate similar very positive economic data, further validating our strategy. So moving to international. In 2024, we received EU MDR in Europe for iQ+ which allowed us to up feature the probe with our latest software capabilities and fast followed with iQ3 certification in September, allowing for the European launch of iQ3. We won access to many new markets in Asia for iQ+ and I believe global penetration for iQ3 will power international growth in 2025 in both unit volume and ASP as we will have both products available for sale throughout the entire year. I'd like to give you a brief update on Ros or RoHS, the revocation process in Europe. As you know, we formally submitted our application to revoke the lead exemption for piezoelectric handheld ultrasound devices. We believe the industry, of course, is aware and in the process of putting together a response. We also understand the EU Commission is identifying a third-party who will begin the process of researching our petition and the counter arguments following the open comment period. That should take the review to the end of 2025. And we hope that by this time next year, we'll learn of the independent reviewers' recommendation to the EU. If a decision is made in our favor, we believe it may take up to 12 to 18 months to implement from then. So wrapping up discussion of our core POCUS business, we're pushing ahead into 2025 with a focus on scaling. We have many software improvements planned to make data management workflows faster and easier, our integrations to be more expansive for all EMRs and our data management to be more valuable, even for smaller customers. We will be focusing on combined software and hardware sales to health systems as we grow customers from departmental installations to multi departmental and ultimately full enterprise customers. So beyond the core business, our strategic initiatives matured during the year and brought greater clarity to how Butterfly will change in the future. Entering the fourth quarter, Butterfly Garden had 17 partners signed, each developing their applications to work in the Butterfly ecosystem. Well, the team signed four new partners, including our first veterinary AI app in the fourth quarter, bringing a total of 21. In 2025, 6 of the 21 partners are anticipated to go commercial, five of which expect to win FDA clearance to become the first Garden apps for clinical use. These apps will join the two educational AI applications already deployed in the Garden. And we are very excited to welcome these companies and products, and we'll work to amplify their capabilities to our user base. As you know, each AI application will bring new capabilities for users, each making and capturing and interpreting ultrasound easier. Butterfly users will buy these new AI apps, and these companies will grow their business by being in the Butterfly ecosystem. It's just a win-win. So now shifting to Octiv, our wholly-owned subsidiary that's tasked with commercializing our chip technology through partners in non-competitive markets. So they've also been quite busy. In our second quarter earnings report, we shared that we signed a term sheet for a third partner. Today, we're excited to announce that partner is Sonic Incytes, a commercial stage business pioneering a novel approach for liver disease assessment. Sonic Incytes and Octiv are collaborating to develop technology that leverages Ultrasound-on-Chip for fatty liver disease assessment, a market poised for significant multibillion dollar growth. We are also pleased to share that we've signed two additional partners. Our fourth partner is in the neuroscience space, a burgeoning market where our technology is uniquely suited given its broad powerful imaging capabilities and overall flexibility, including miniaturization. Lastly, our fifth partner is one of the leading companies in the generative AI space, who will be developing new hardware technology. We look forward to sharing more details on these partnerships in the coming months and anticipate all of these new signed partnerships to contribute revenue in 2025. So now let's turn to Butterfly HomeCare. As we highlighted during our last earnings call, we recently signed a pilot agreement with the largest health services organization to deliver lung ultrasound services to the members residing in long-term care and assisted living facilities across two counties in Wisconsin. We've trained their nurse practitioners to capture lung ultrasound images using our probe, AI guided tools and our Compass software. The pilot officially launched and we're already seeing positive results. We're currently onboarding members with congestive heart failure. The initial participants are patients being discharged from the hospital after a congestive heart failure episode. And the goal is to ensure that they receive appropriate follow-up care and to identify any early signs of worsening heart failure. Through the pilot, they've already detected conditions like pneumonia, pleural effusions and other complications, allowing the team to interview promptly and deliver care according to the established protocols. Although it's still early, both we and our partner are encouraged by the outcome since the pilot launch. Notably, no patients have needed to be transferred out of the facility for scanning, and none have been readmitted to the hospital. We are confident that this pilot will showcase improved care and cost savings for our partner, and we look forward to keeping you updated on our progress. I can't stress enough how important these findings are. We're teaching nurse practitioners who've not been classically trained in ultrasound to do lung ultrasound using AI to assess patients’ right where they are. This pilot is not just about the immediate business opportunity ahead of us, which is great. It represents the power of Butterfly. Butterfly has made ultrasound accessible, high quality, mobile and at a low cost. Now we're proving that all healthcare professionals can use it to help patients where they are efficiently and at scale. As this program evolves from pilot to a new care delivery model, we expect to see new AI apps from the Garden to further empower caregivers with low cost tools delivered on the go, wherever the patient is. This is only possible because of the evolving digital landscape that's driven by Butterfly. In addition to the pilot, at the December, Butterfly HomeCare also executed a proof of concept at myPlace Health. myPlace is a PACE organization, and the acronym stands for Program of All Inclusive Care for the Elderly. And it's to demonstrate that Butterfly Services can identify conditions in previously undiagnosed patients. Our pilot was successful in identifying previously undocumented conditions such as peripheral vascular disease, pleural effusions, diastolic heart failure and potential cardiac failure, resulting in an immediate hospitalization. Our work with myPlace allows them to risk score their members so they receive appropriate reimbursement and care. myPlace is one of the 180 PACE organizations nationwide, and we expect to collaborate with them this year to expand with them as well as to expand to other PACE organizations. So now, I'll turn it over to Heather to go deeper in the quarter. Heather?