 So my name is Justin Feinstein, I'm a clinical neuropsychologist at the Laureate Institute for Brain Research. I'm also director of the Float Clinic and Research Center, which we built this past year. And the primary goal of the clinic is to understand what happens to both the body and the brain when you float. And we're also interested from a clinical perspective of whether we could help people who are struggling with mental illness, specifically anxiety. And today's talk is really going to be about what happens in the brain when you float. And in particular we're looking at sort of the positive side of things. What happens when you receive rewards and the anticipation of those rewards post-float. And what we're finding essentially is that the reward circuitry of the brain seems to be enhanced following a float. And we're going to be presenting data from really the first fMRI study that's ever been done on a floating.