Good morning everyone. Thanks for joining us. As I often do I will start by pointing to Wiley’s mission which is to unlock human potential and do so by powering scientific research and career connected education. This is far more than just a statement, it is our purpose, our culture, and our differentiator. Through many cycles and periods of disruption, the Wiley brand has helped us to win and retain customers, authors, and partners. And together with them we have promoted science, growth, and social progress for more than 200 years. The Wiley team accomplished a lot in the second quarter. This is both despite and in response to a challenging economic environment. We have seen a confluence of headwinds, these include decade high inflation, low consumer confidence, a tight job market, rising interest rates, FX volatility, and ongoing geopolitical disruption. These pressures have caused a pullback in consumer spending that is effective about consumer facing and enrollment dependent businesses. And this has impacted our revenue performance for the quarter and our growth expectations for the year. Christina will speak to that later in the call. Despite all this, our core growth engines of research publishing, research solutions, and corporate talent development remains strong and they are performing well. Research has a solid growth trajectory, consistent margins, and a recession tolerant profile. It continues to be supported by ever increasing R&D spending worldwide that drives up publishing volume and the demand for Wiley's research content and solutions. Since 2000, global R&D has more than tripled to $2.4 trillion. This spending growth has persisted through multiple recessions. Corporate talent development is now a major growth driver for Wiley, driven by the success of our unique education services that help corporations to fill their big talent gaps rapidly and reliably. That said, earnings were down this quarter due to revenue challenges in academic and professional learning, along with ongoing investment in our core growth areas, most notably research. To mitigate these revenue challenges, we've accelerated our cost reduction program, including implementing targeted workforce actions, the general hiring freeze, real estate consolidation, and disciplined expense management. Our important work to simplify and optimize Wiley is moving forward steadily. As part of this, we continue to streamline our structure to better align with our customers and their needs and this is helping us to drive greater impact, synergy, and efficiency. You will recall that last quarter we reorganized our research segment into publishing and solutions to great effect. Now we are reorganizing education lines of business into two new customer centric segments to achieve similar goals, namely to align tightly with Wiley's two primary target markets in education, universities and employers. I'll talk about this a bit more later in the presentation. Let's look at our Q2 performance. As always, all variances exclude currency impacts. Wiley’s revenue for the quarter grew 1%, but it was down slightly on an organic basis. Growth and open research, research solutions, corporate talent development, and corporate training offset declines in APL's publishing lines and in university services. Adjusted EBITDA declined by 4%, which is in line with our expectations for the quarter. The decline is attributed to the soft APL revenue performance combined with our planned investments to scale both research publishing and research solutions. Our adjusted EBITDA margin of 24% came in slightly ahead of prior year. Christina will take you through our segment performance in more detail. Adjusted EPS declined 13% due to the adjusted EBITDA performance and to $5 million of additional interest expense compared to prior year, a result of the current rate environment. As you know, we hold ourselves accountable for achieving our commitments. In research, we said we would do four things in fiscal 2023. One, publish more to meet global demand and drive revenue. Two, establish more transformational agreements. Three, scale our research solutions. And four, streamline our workflows to increase both revenue and profitability. I'm pleased to say that we're making good progress on all fronts. And publishing more we grew article submissions this quarter by 6%, although publishing output rose only 1% due to variances in publication timing. Open research continues to be a strong driver of growth for us, with OA article output up by double digits. We continue to make good progress in the market on transformational agreements, recently renewing our landmark countrywide agreement in Germany. This multiyear renewal is significant and that it validates our model and our long-term customer centered approach. The new deal gives research authors in Germany even more publishing options, with an additional 240 journals integrated into the new contract. To date, Wiley has signed over 40 agreements representing over 2000 institutions spanning 23 countries. The deal pipeline remains very strong, particularly in the U.S. and Europe. In the U.S., these important agreements will allow our customers now to comply with the new White House guidance on federally funded research. As a reminder, the U.S. Office of Science and Technology policy or the OSTP, issued guidance in August calling for all new federally funded research to be open and freely available starting in 2026. As you know, this direction is fully aligned with our strategy and supported by our strong momentum in open research. In research solutions, we continue to see strong momentum. We signed 18 new research solutions partners in the quarter, including Project Hope, a renowned global health and humanitarian relief organization. We also executed several product launches, including the Career Center for the American College of Emergency Physicians. As expected, cross sell and upsell opportunities are accelerating within our network of 900 society and corporate partners. We expanded nine partnerships with additional services, including our multifaceted partnership with the AAAS, the world's largest scientific society. We now provide them with editorial services, distribute their journal content through our platform, and manage their important job board, which is appropriately called Science Careers. Wiley now powers the recruitment sites of four of the world's most significant scientific organizations. Two of them are also primary publishing competitors, demonstrating the power of Wiley's ecosystem approach. I recently attended the Frankfurt Book Fair, the most important industry event for the research publishing community. While there, I met with lots of prospective customers and industry stakeholders. Got to say that the buzz around Wiley and our solution strategy is incredible. After the event, one prominent industry pundit summed it up perfectly writing this, “Wiley is taking a bold stance with this new division, investing in the collaborative solutions that will help the industry successfully navigate the transformations necessary in open research. It is likely to be a good move for Wiley, helping to extend its customer base, diversify revenue streams, grow revenue through facilitating upselling, and sustain its partnerships across the publishing supply chain. Wiley will enjoy access to volumes of data about publishing and research trends, which could open up new product or business opportunities, as well as greater strategic advantage.” That pretty much says it all. Finally, we continue to drive increasing automation, intelligence, and efficiency across the research publishing process and our investment is paying off. For example, the intelligence systems we are implementing are allowing the proportion of submitted articles kept in the Wiley universe to continue to rise. Year-to-date, 66% of rejected authors were offered another Wiley Journal option, up from 52% the prior year period, and 33% in fiscal 2021. These efforts will pay off with incremental revenue growth and strong margin contribution over time. So Q2 was another solid quarter of execution in research. Now let's turn to our commitments and career connected education. At the beginning of the year, we said we were going to expand our corporate and university client base, drive growth in our differentiated courseware offerings, and gain operating efficiency. On growing the customer base, we're making good progress. Wiley signed another six large corporate clients and talent development during the quarter. These included multinationals in technology, healthcare, financial services, and consumer staples. The client pipeline remained strong and we are seeing double-digit growth in employee placement. Of course, we are monitoring the labor market very closely given the current economic uncertainty, but so far demand for our talent development remains robust across both existing and new clients. It's important to note that there remain over 300,000 open tech jobs in the U.S., even higher than it was before the pandemic. Wiley also continues to be the go-to partner in university services. We signed four new partnerships this quarter: Cal State San Marcos, the University of the Sunshine Coast in Australia, Bay Path University in Massachusetts, and Bernau University in Georgia. Within our existing partner base, we added nine new degree programs for a total of 56 new programs year-to-date. These new programs are underlying drivers of our future growth. So while enrollment remains a cyclical headwind, we continue to see consistent institutional demand for Wiley's value-added services. Let me say a few words about enrollment and its drivers. Despite the softening economy, we're still seeing a very strong labor market. Consequently, many would be students are being drawn directly into jobs instead of preparing for their careers with education. We expect this to unwind as the economy slows, but there is historically a 12 to 18-month lag between the start of a recession and the material uptick in university enrollment. In any case, our focus now of course, is on helping our university partners to compete in this challenging moment while also preparing them to win as the cycle turns back in their favor. Wiley, of course, continues to deliver differentiated courses and courseware for learners. Our STEM-focused courseware called zyBooks saw a growth of 27% this quarter. This is a great example of how we win despite market challenges. We delivered great products in high potential disciplines. During the quarter, we launched our first courseware solution in data science, a rapidly growing career-connected subject. We also won an important adoption with the Virginia Community College and we expanded our institutional relationships with three of the largest online universities in the United States. Finally, on the efficiency front. We're actively reorganizing and rightsizing the APL publishing lines to reflect market realities and improve their profile. Among other things, we are reducing overhead, focusing our development efforts, outsourcing lower value editorial activities, and modernizing our go-to-market approaches. And in talent development, which is in rapid growth phase, we are driving towards meaningful profit contribution by automating and reengineering our processes as we scale the business. So overall in education, we continue to execute on our fiscal 2023 commitments despite the economic and market headwinds. We continue to drive real-world impact at Wiley through our core business activities in research and education while making progress on our commitment to the UN sustainable development goals. We remain focused on three of the UN SDGs, quality education, reducing inequities, and climate action. In Career Connected Education, we are actively expanding access to high-quality education and gainful employment and thus, we are working to reduce inequities. In fact, 60% of our IT placement candidates globally now come from underrepresented population. This is well ahead of our target. And as a leading scientific publisher, we published, for example, over 100 journals related specifically to climate science. Wiley is committed to being carbon net zero by 2040, aligning to the critical climate goal of preventing the global temperature from increasing beyond 1.5 degrees. This critical goal is in line with both the science-based targets initiative and the Paris agreement. In addition, Wiley continues to be recognized for our ESG progress and risk profile, achieving strong scores from Sustainalytics, S&P, ISS and MSCI. Hats off to all of our Wiley colleagues for their dedication to and support for our ongoing impact journey. I'll now pass the call over to Cristina to take you through our segment results, cost measures, and outlook.