Thank you, Yvonne. Good afternoon, everyone and thanks for joining us today for ENDRA’s second quarter 2021 financial results and business update. ENDRA is well capitalized and we’re putting in place the building blocks for the global success of our Thermo Acoustic Enhanced UltraSound technology known as TAEUS. Although certain elements are out of our control, including regulatory processes and the COVID pandemic, we’re focused on advancing our commercial plans for TAEUS in Europe and supporting our clinical evaluation sites, as well as remaining highly responsive to the FDA regarding our 510(k) submission. TAEUS is a non-invasive simple to use proprietary technology platform with its first application focused on measuring liver fat for the early assessment of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease known as NAFLD and also its inflammatory stage known as non-alcoholic steatohepatitis or NASH. By enhancing the capabilities of existing ultrasound systems, TAEUS allows clinicians to visualize tissue in ways similar to an MRI, but at the point of patient care and it’s 50 times lower cost. TAEUS a CE mark for the NAFLD/NASH application in Europe. In addition, we submitted a 510(k) application with the U.S. FDA last year. Although the review period has been longer than expected, we remain optimistic about securing 510(k) clearance with TAEUS this year. FDA review of a 510(k) submission requires careful review of indications for intended use, effectiveness and safety of both the predicate device and the submitted device. We understand that TAEUS represents an advancement in medical ultrasound technology and may require more time and additional questions as part of the FDA’s review when compared to a conventional ultrasound submission that typically only represents small incremental technical advancement and appear very similar to previously reviewed ultrasound systems. When compared to existing comparable ultrasound devices, we are confident of the technical performance of our device that is presented in our submission and our safety analysis demonstrate that our first TAEUS device presents no new safety concerns as compared to the FDA cleared predicate devices. To date, we have a total of six TAEUS clinical evaluation partnerships globally, three in the U.S. and three in Europe. The protocol at each site involves comparing hepatic steatosis or liver fat in patients scanned with a TAEUS system first and those same patients scan them on the MRI-PDFF with both scans to be performed within a couple of weeks to ensure comparability of results. Given the pandemic restrictions in Europe, those three partners have not been able to commend scanning. However, here in the U.S. scanning is underway at Rocky Vista University in Utah with a goal of scanning 200 patients. In addition, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center is approaching the end of its backlog of MRI procedures and is expected to start scanning patients in September. I remind our listeners that scheduling under clinical evaluations is tied to the availability of MRI equipment, which is being heavily used in hospitals as many of the elective procedures that were postponed during the pandemic are now returning in high volume causing temporary backlogs for MRIs. In addition, pandemic related cleaning procedures are taking longer between each MRI scan. So MRI capacity is constrained for now, but we remain in close communication with our evaluation partners who remain eager and committed to working with ENDRA. As the hospitals work through their backlogs, we look forward to kicking off the remaining sites and generate valuable data for TAEUS. As a reminder, these clinical evaluations are not related to our FDA submission. We continue to drive awareness of TAEUS by participating in clinical conferences where many clinicians and pharmaceutical companies come to learn about new research and technologies as well as to pursue collaborations. In June, we exhibited virtually at the Annual European Association for the Study of Liver Conference, which was attended by approximately 7,500 clinicians, researchers and industry members in gastro hepatology, endocrinology and other specialties. We built up quite a network of clinical context through these industry conferences and look forward to resuming trade shows in-Person once possible. We plan to exhibit the TAEUS system at several more industry conferences later this year, as noted in the Events section on our corporate website. Our sales team in Europe is hard at work as restrictions start to ease in key regions. We have a total of four people on our commercial team in Europe with the goal of adding a sales representative in each target country at the appropriate time. This team is working with our partner GE Healthcare to call on and leverage their existing ultrasound customer base of radiologists. In addition, our sales team is independently calling on both virtually and in-person, other customer segments, such as gastro hepatologist and endocrinologists. Renaud will provide more details on our commercial activities in Europe in a moment. Earlier this year, we signed a collaborative agreement with Hepion Pharmaceuticals to incorporate our TAEUS technology in their upcoming Phase 2b study for the treatment of NASH. We’re pleased to be working with Hepion as TAEUS will be used as an add-on technology to support patient screening and biomarker measurement of liver fat. As pharmaceutical companies and contract research organizations seek opportunities to increase efficiencies in drug development, we believe TAEUS can provide three key benefits to these organizations. First, during the enrollment process, like Hepion, ENDRA’s technology will allow pharma companies to efficiently screen patients to evaluate if they meet the study criteria. Currently over 50% of potential recruits in the industry typically rejected at the screening stage, and this can be costly and cause delays with the inconvenience of a surgical biopsy or an MRI to follow. Second, throughout the trial of the drugs, TAEUS can also provide convenient liver fat measurements prior to MRI or biopsy measurements, which can help pharmaceutical companies and CROs identify liver fat trends earlier. Third, and lastly, once a drug is approved for sale, TAEUS can serve as an assessment tool to help identify patients who are suitable for therapy and then to monitor their progress. We're pursuing additional pharmaceutical collaboration opportunities beyond Hepion and view these collaborations as an important first step to develop the pharmaceutical market as commercial customers for TAEUS, in addition to the end user clinicians in radiology and hepatology that our salespeople are targeting. Finally, we continue to bolster our intellectual property portfolio to protect our technology globally for both current and future applications with eight patents issued year-to-date. I'm very proud to say our current IP portfolio has grown to 87 assets, which we define as patents in preparation, filed and issued. With that update, I'd like to turn the call over to Renaud Maloberti to provide more detail on our commercial activities. Renaud?