 Great. Well, thanks to all of you for joining. It's a beautiful Friday afternoon here in the DC area. As you know, the email that I sent last night, I referred to it yesterday, it's also a federal holiday that we're observing. And so I just wanted to make a few comments about that before I turn it over to Howard and Judy to take us into our next session and the rest of the afternoon. Carol, can you advance to the next slide? Thank you. So I think around 10, 15 last night, I sent you some information on the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act. We were all participating in the workshop and didn't get a chance to watch the signing. But we included a link for those of you that were interested if you haven't seen it already and also some additional resources that we thought would be of interest to you. So Joe and Ella actually put this slide together, including the quote from President Biden. And towards the end, he says, in short, this day doesn't just celebrate the past. It calls for action today. And I think myself and all of us are keeping that in mind as we think about the new frontiers in the forefront of genomics. We recognize there's so many gaps in diversity and workforce diversity, diversity of data. There's issues of structural racism. We've heard some of those comments throughout the workshop yesterday. And we're glad that we all are thinking carefully about health equity. And we hope some of that is woven into the conversations today. So thank you to all of you for joining. We recognize some of our colleagues that are federal employees won't be here today. And that's perfectly fine. I'm glad they've decided to observe the holiday today. And we'll make all these resources available to them. So thank you. I'll pass it over to Howard and Judy. I'm looking forward to day two. Great. Welcome, everybody. Welcome back. Thank you for joining the second day of the NHGRI workshop on multiomics in health and disease. And once again, I'm Howard Chang from Stanford University. And together with me is Dr. Judy Cho. Hi, Judy Cho from Metsanai in New York. So our overall goal today is that we're going to explore some. Yesterday, we heard about the technologies and some of the applications of multi-omic technologies already in health care setting. And today, we're going to hear more about specific study designs and observational studies. We're going to have a panel discussion about the opportunities and challenges. And the afternoon will focus on future clinical implementations and specifically, we'll link to possible therapeutic interventions and really more the direction of moving this technology towards the clinic. At the end, we're going to have a discussion with all of you. Really, all of you are going to be the stars. Because at the end, we really hope to come up with some ideas for recommendations to NHGRI. It is also our hope that the discussion will create a summary of the state of the field that we can and also the potential future cost to action that will be available to possibly be published in a leading academic journal. So that is the goal for our workshop. And with that, I'm going to move on to remind you of some Zoom etiquette, some housekeeping items. So first of all, since we're all in a virtual environment, please indicate your name and affiliation on your Zoom profiles. And secondly, during the presentations, your video and audios be turned off by default to reduce noise. But we want your active participation. And so please do turn on your video and speak when you ask questions and we're participating in the Q&A. You may also post your questions in the chat. And then the moderators will also read them off at the end for the Q&A sessions. The moderators will also be keeping time during the presentations and will give a verbal one-minute reminder towards the end of each presentation. And a final item is that we are not promoting this workshop in social media. And so please do not do so. OK, with that, I'd be happy to turn over the screen to our next moderator, Dr. Joannella Morales.