Thanks, Chris, and let me add my welcome to everyone. Before I begin, I wanted to highlight our updated segment reporting. Starting this quarter, we are reporting our Consumer Interactive business within our U.S. market segment. Additionally, we have shifted certain revenue between U.S. financial services, U.S. emerging verticals and our International segment. These actions better align our reporting to how we run the business under our U.S. markets and international [ presidents ] . We have provided recast 2022 and 2023 quarterly results for the updated reporting in an 8-K filed on Tuesday and have posted the details to our Investor Relations website. Additionally, in the appendix of today's presentation, we have provided incremental vertical revenue mix disclosure for our U.S. financial services, U.S. emerging verticals and Consumer Interactive businesses for fiscal year 2023. As Chris mentioned, in the first quarter, we exceeded our guidance on all key financial metrics. First quarter consolidated revenue increased 9% on a reported basis, and 8% on an organic constant currency basis. There was no impact from acquisitions and a less than 1% benefit from foreign currency. Our business grew 5% on an organic constant currency basis, excluding mortgage from both the first quarter of 2023 and 2024. Adjusted EBITDA increased 11% on a reported and constant currency basis. Our adjusted EBITDA margin was 35.1%, ahead of our expectations and up 80 basis points compared to the year ago quarter due to flow-through on revenue growth. First quarter adjusted diluted earnings per share was $0.92, an increase of 14%. The adjusted tax rate for the quarter was 22.5%. Finally, in the first quarter, we took $43 million of onetime charges related to the next phase of our transformation program, $24 million for operating model optimization and $19 million for technology transformation. We continue to expect to incur roughly $200 million of onetime expenses in 2024, driving $65 million of in-year operating expense savings. As part of our $355 million to $375 million program, we expect the remaining $75 million to $95 million of onetime expenses to be incurred in 2025. Looking at segment financial performance for the first quarter. U.S. markets revenue, which now includes Consumer Interactive, was up 7% compared to the year ago quarter. Adjusted EBITDA for U.S. markets was up 6% and adjusted EBITDA margin was down 20 basis points to 36.2%. Financial Services revenue grew 13% with trends broadly consistent with the levels seen in the fourth quarter. Excluding mortgage, Financial Services, revenue was up 1%. Consumer lending revenue returned to growth, up 2% in the quarter. Activity remained muted as fintechs and others remain cautious given rates and market uncertainty. New customer and wallet share wins across fintech, buy now pay later, and short-term lenders offset some of the softness and contributed to growth. Our credit card and banking business was flat. While issuance is healthy on a historical basis, online and batch activity remains tempered as lenders manage rising delinquencies. We are enabling our customers to navigate the current environment and position themselves for future growth with highly relevant products such as our TruVision Risk Solutions, TruIQ's analytical suite, Trusted Call Solutions and our TruValidate fraud offerings. Our auto business grew 2% despite continued headwinds in the auto market, driven by new business wins and growth from captive auto lenders. Consumers, particularly near prime and subprime continue to face affordability challenges from higher interest rates and declining, but still high used car prices. Improved new vehicle inventory has provided some increased credit volume as well as interest from OEMs and dealers and noncredit solutions as they seek to acquire more customers. We are seeing strong momentum selling Neustar marketing and Trusted Call Solutions into the auto space. For mortgage, revenue grew 52% against inquiry volume declines of 8%. Outperformance related to higher-than-expected price realization on third-party scores and credit products. Volumes were also slightly higher than our expectations, especially in prequalification. Relative to prequalification volume, shopping activity has been healthy, and to date, we have not seen much incremental pressure from the extension of the GSE prequalification program. We are pleased with the strong mortgage growth in the quarter, but given uncertainty around interest rates, origination volumes an uptake of these newer prequalification programs, we continue to take a conservative view on our mortgage guidance for the year. On a trailing 12-month basis, mortgage represented about 8% of total TransUnion revenue. Let me now turn to our emerging verticals, which grew 4% in the quarter. Insurance, media, public sector and collections led the way for growth. Telecommunications in tech, retail and e-commerce grew modestly, while tenant and employment screening declined as expected. Our appendix slide provides helpful detail on the relative sizing of each of these verticals. In Insurance, we delivered improved growth with market trends progressing as expected to start the year. Select underwriters are starting to resume marketing activity as rate adequacy improves, with broader recovery expected as the year progresses. Healthier backdrop supports credit-based marketing volume as well as increased demand for our suite of marketing products, such as identity-based data hygiene and targeted audience solutions. Consumer shopping activity remains strong. We continue to deliver significant new business wins across our core products as well as with innovative products like TruVision driving history, successful cross-selling of Neustar and Sontiq solutions and penetration of the life and commercial insurance market. Media, public sector and collections all grew double digits. Media benefited from marketing identity and audience wins and a stabilizing market backdrop. Public sector and collections were again powered by strong growth in Trusted Call Solutions, along with fraud volumes in the public sector. Telco was up slightly in line with the recent trajectory and our growth expectation for the vertical, which includes many of our legacy communication solutions like landline caller ID. Tech, retail and e-commerce was also up modestly as it comped against project-based revenue in the prior year. Tenant and employment screening declined as expected as we work through the recalibration of our solutions. We expect better performance in the second half of the year as we lap the impact of these actions. Turning to Consumer Interactive. Revenue decreased 2%. Our indirect channel grew benefiting from continued breach wins. Reach revenues can be uneven, but we are accelerating our pace of wins largely on the strength of Sontiq offerings. Our direct business declined as expected as we work through the impact of our recalibrated marketing strategy. We are making good progress on broadening our value proposition and go-to-market strategy in this business. For my comments about International, all revenue growth comparisons will be in constant currency. For the total segment, revenue grew 15%, with 4 of our 6 reported markets growing by double digits. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 45.2%, up 230 basis points. Now let's dig into the specifics for each region. In India, we grew 31%. We delivered growth across consumer credit, commercial credit, fraud, marketing and direct-to-consumer supported by strong market trends. In the U.K., revenue was flat. The U.K. fintech market remains subdued but has stabilized, and we continue to see solid growth in banking and insurance, setting us up for some improvement as the year progresses. TruVision trended data, affordability-oriented solutions and our consumer offerings continue to drive new wins. Canadian business delivered another quarter of very strong performance, growing 18% despite a muted macro environment. We benefited from share gains in financial services, strong growth in telco and insurance, momentum in Consumer Indirect and recent breach wins. Growth in Canada was also a bit better than anticipated due to healthier online volumes. Looking ahead, as we lap sizable new business wins, we expect growth in subsequent quarters to return to high single digits, which still represents market-leading performance in Canada. In Latin America, revenue was up 7%. In Colombia and other Latin America countries, we delivered broad-based growth with stabilizing market conditions after a softer second half 2023. Brazil was flat after a few quarters of declines, and we expect further improvement as the year progresses. In Asia Pacific, we grew 17%, driven by very strong growth in the Philippines and another solid quarter in Hong Kong. Finally, Africa increased 12% led by our retail and insurance verticals. Turning to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with roughly $5.3 billion of debt and $434 million of cash. We finished the quarter with a leverage ratio of 3.5x. You can find our debt profile in the appendix of our presentation. We did not make debt prepayments in the first quarter, but expect to make some prepayments over the course of 2024 with our excess free cash flow. Our focus this year remains on executing against the transformation initiatives. We expect most of our $355 million to $375 million of onetime transformation expense to be paid out in 2024. Based on our expectation for adjusted EBITDA and cash generation, we expect our leverage ratio to be in the low 3x range by the end of 2024. We continue to work toward our leverage ratio target of under 3x. We do not view 3x as an ending point for deleveraging and viewed debt prepayment as an attractive incremental use of our cash over the medium term. Turning to guidance. Even after a strong start to the year, our approach remains unchanged. We continue to assume muted economic growth throughout 2024 with steady lending volumes and no benefit from interest rate cuts. That brings us to our outlook for the second quarter of 2024. We expect foreign exchange to have an insignificant impact on revenue and adjusted EBITDA. We expect revenue to be between $1.017 billion and $1.026 billion or up 5% to 6% on an as reported and organic constant currency basis. Our revenue guidance includes approximately 3 points of tailwind from mortgage. Meaning that we expect the remainder of our business to grow 2% to 3% on an organic constant currency basis. We expect mortgage revenue growth in the second quarter to be slightly lower than the 52% we experienced in the first quarter. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be between $366 million and $372 million, up 8% to 10%. We expect adjusted EBITDA margin of 36.0% to 36.3% or up 90 to 120 basis points. We also expect our adjusted diluted earnings per share to be between $0.95 and $0.98, up 11% to 14%. Turning to the full year. We expect insignificant impact from foreign exchange on revenue and adjusted EBITDA. We expect revenue to come in between $4.023 billion and $4.083 billion or up 5% to 6.5% on an as reported and organic constant currency basis. Our increased guidance is driven entirely by mortgage, specifically from better-than-anticipated price realization on third-party scores and credit reports. 2024, our mortgage inquiry assumption is unchanged at down 5%. However, we now expect our mortgage revenue to increase about 50%, up from 25% prior. We now expect inquiries to be slightly better in the first half of the year, but still down 10% and for the second half volumes to be flat. We expect our organic constant currency growth, excluding mortgage, to be up about 2% to 3.5%. We are pleased with our nonmortgage outperformance in the first quarter, but continue to take a deliberately conservative approach to the rest of the year, given continued market uncertainty. For our business segments, we expect U.S. markets to grow mid-single digit or up low single digit, excluding mortgage. We now anticipate Financial Services to be up low double digit or low single-digit growth, excluding mortgage. We continue to expect emerging verticals to be up low single digit, and we expect Consumer Interactive to decline low single digit. We now anticipate that International will grow low double digit in constant currency terms driven by broad-based positive trends and led by India. Turning back to the total company outlook. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be between $1.433 billion and $1.475 billion, up 7% to 10%. And would result in adjusted EBITDA margin being 35.6% to 36.1% or up 50 to 100 basis points. Anticipate adjusted diluted earnings per share to be $3.69 to $3.86, up 10% to 15%. We expect our adjusted tax rate to be approximately 22.5%. Depreciation and amortization is expected to be approximately $530 million, and we expect the portion excluding step-up amortization from our 2012 change in control and subsequent acquisitions to be about $245 million. Anticipate net interest expense would be about $250 million for the full year, up $5 million from prior guidance due to higher SOFR. We expect capital expenditures to be about 9% of revenue. And as previously noted, we continue to expect to incur $200 million in onetime charges in 2024 related to our transformation program. I'll now turn the time back to Chris for some final comments.