PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

SwRI Workbench for Offline Robotics Development™ (SWORD™) launched at Automate 2024

Southwest Research Institute develops user-friendly ROS programming graphical toolkit for developers

SwRI Workbench for Offline Robotics Development™ (SWORD™) launched at Automate 2024
2024-05-06
(Press-News.org) SAN ANTONIO — May 6, 2024 – Southwest Research Institute is simplifying robotics programming with a new toolkit that embeds computer-aided design (CAD) into robotics motion planning, modeling and execution. The SwRI Workbench for Offline Robotics Development™ (SWORD™) features a user-friendly graphical interface to demystify the fundamental coding required in robot operating system (ROS) application development.

Informed by the Institute’s role in supporting the ROS-Industrial community, SwRI developed SWORD so manufacturing engineers can leverage CAD knowledge to unlock more complex capabilities within the ROS codebase. SwRI manages the ROS-Industrial Americas Consortium and supports ROS-I software repositories, executing training and developer events.

“The traditional ROS workflow is programming-intense, requiring developers to be deeply familiar with available ROS libraries and tools. Even experienced ROS developers can spend significant time on initial setup and configuration,” said Matt Robinson, an SwRI engineer who manages the ROS-Industrial Americas Consortium. “We listened to ROS experts and consortium members to develop SWORD to provide easier access to the ROS motion-planning tools, while sticking to a CAD-based environment that non-developers are familiar with.”

SWORD features a graphical toolkit for setting up motion planning environments and collision geometries. It can also test advanced robotic motion-planning applications. Implemented as a plugin to the open-source FreeCAD application, SWORD allows users to integrate robotics capabilities in a cross-platform CAD environment.

It provides a graphical interface to many powerful motion-planning libraries. The goal is to adapt ROS for manufacturing and industrial audiences in a way that is more approachable in a familiar environment.

“SWORD is designed for both robotics developers and manufacturing engineers familiar with CAD processes and programs on process-oriented systems,” said Jeremy Zoss, an SwRI engineer who helped to develop the software. “SWORD brings advanced motion-planning capability to this audience, allowing them to take advantage of these advanced tools in their operational environments.”

Key SWORD features include:

Environmental Modeling: Create or import a CAD model of your robot, including fixtures and end-of-arm-tooling. Manipulate and control robot model using joint sliders and simulate tool movement with an intuitive dragger to evaluate and calculate joint configurations.  

Robot Manipulation and Planning: Generate motion plans using commercial path planners, creating custom pipelines for application-specific behavior while predicting and avoiding collisions.  

Custom Planning Pipeline: Define robot motion using either coordinate-based or joint waypoints, specifying different movement segment types and motion groups while inserting supplementary commands.  

SWORD is officially released, and seats are available. A trial version is available upon request to help you determine if it is right for your organization. To learn more, visit https://sword.swri.org. See a demonstration of ROS May 6-9 at the Automate show in Chicago. Visit SwRI at booth No. 3543.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
SwRI Workbench for Offline Robotics Development™ (SWORD™) launched at Automate 2024 SwRI Workbench for Offline Robotics Development™ (SWORD™) launched at Automate 2024 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Science doesn't understand how ice forms (video)

Science doesnt understand how ice forms (video)
2024-05-06
WASHINGTON, May 6, 2024 — This video contains incredible macro footage of supercooled water droplets nucleating ice. All George wanted to do was make a crystal-clear ice cube. Instead, he ended up rediscovering dendritic crystal growth, a beautiful phenomenon first described in the 17th century. You’ll never look at your freezer the same way again. https://youtu.be/24TB1vPuzIU?feature=shared Reactions is a video series produced by the American Chemical Society and PBS Digital Studios. Subscribe to Reactions at http://bit.ly/ACSReactions and ...

Study reveals APOE4 gene duplication as a new genetic form of Alzheimer's disease

Study reveals APOE4 gene duplication as a new genetic form of Alzheimers disease
2024-05-06
Researchers from the Research Area on Neurological Diseases, Neuroscience, and Mental Health at the Sant Pau Research Institute, led by Dr. Juan Fortea, Director of the Memory Unit of the Neurology Service at the same hospital, have found that over 95% of individuals over 65 years old who have two copies of the APOE4 gene -APOE4 homozygotes- show biological characteristics of Alzheimer's pathology in the brain or biomarkers of this disease in cerebrospinal fluid and PET scans. The study, published today in Nature Medicine, also concludes that those individuals homozygous for APOE4 also develop ...

Study highlights key predictors of adolescent substance use; special issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry focuses on substance use disorders

2024-05-06
  NEW YORK, May 6, 2024 – New research, published online today in the American Journal of Psychiatry, examined a broad range of potential predictors of substance use among adolescents and found sociodemographic variables were the most robust predictors of substance use initiation. The study is part of a special issue of the journal highlighting advances in understanding the neurobiology and sociodemographic underpinnings of substance use disorders and how this understanding has advanced recognition and treatment. Several authors discussed this work today at a special briefing during the 2024 Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric ...

Racial and ethnic disparities in initiation of direct oral anticoagulants among Medicare beneficiaries

2024-05-06
About The Study: In this cohort study of Medicare patients with atrial fibrillation, Black and Hispanic patients were less likely to initiate direct oral anticoagulants for atrial fibrillation, although these differences diminished over time. Identifying the factors behind these early disparities is crucial for ensuring equitable access to novel therapies as they emerge for Black and Hispanic populations.  Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding authors, email Kamika R. Reynolds, M.S., Ph.D. (kreynolds@ifh.rutgers.edu) and Chintan ...

Behavioral interventions to improve breast cancer screening outreach

2024-05-06
About The Study: These findings show that text messaging women after initial breast cancer screening outreach via either electronic portal or mailings, as well as bulk ordering with or without text messaging, can increase mammogram completion rates.   Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author Shivan J. Mehta, M.D., M.B.A., M.S.H.P., email shivan.mehta@pennmedicine.upenn.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2024.0507) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions ...

Venus has almost no water. A new study may reveal why

Venus has almost no water. A new study may reveal why
2024-05-06
Planetary scientists at the University of Colorado Boulder have discovered how Venus, Earth’s scalding and uninhabitable neighbor, became so dry. The new study fills in a big gap in what the researchers call “the water story on Venus.” Using computer simulations, the team found that hydrogen atoms in the planet’s atmosphere go whizzing into space through a process known as “dissociative recombination”—causing Venus to lose roughly twice as much water every day compared to previous estimates. The team will publish their findings May 6 in ...

DDT pollutants found in deep sea fish off Los Angeles coast

DDT pollutants found in deep sea fish off Los Angeles coast
2024-05-06
In the 1940s and 1950s, the ocean off the coast of Los Angeles was a dumping ground for the nation’s largest manufacturer of the pesticide DDT – a chemical now known to harm humans and wildlife. Due to the stubborn chemistry of DDT and its toxic breakdown products, this pollution continues to plague L.A.’s coastal waters more than half a century later. While legal at the time, details of this industrial-scale pollution of the marine environment at a dump site some 15 miles offshore near Catalina Island ...

Turbid waters keep the coast healthy

Turbid waters keep the coast healthy
2024-05-06
Turbid waters keep the coast healthy To preserve the important intertidal areas and salt marshes off our coasts for the future, we need more turbid water. That is one of the striking conclusions from a new study conducted by a Dutch-Chinese team of researchers and published today in Nature Geoscience."These natural areas outside our dikes are essential for nature and coastal defense. But because how we are now building in the Delta and the hinterland, coastal defense is endangered in the long term," warns NIOZ researcher Tim Grandjean.   Satellite measurements For his research, Grandjean linked decades of satellite measurements ...

Microscopic heart vessels imaged in super-resolution for first time at Imperial

2024-05-06
A new imaging technique tested in patients could improve the evaluation of cardiac conditions and undiagnosed chest pain. Researchers from Imperial College London’s Department of Bioengineering and Faculty of Medicine worked alongside academics from UCL to produce sub-millimetre resolution images of cardiac micro-vessels. The non-invasive new imaging technique was tested on four human patients. Existing imaging technologies can visualise large vessels on the heart’s surface. However, this new technique could allow scientists to study the physiology of the heart in more detail by imaging smaller micro-vessels within the heart muscle. This research, ...

Clinical trial shows that cytisinicline can help people quit vaping

2024-05-06
BOSTON–Eleven million U.S. adults use e-cigarettes to vape nicotine, and about half of them say that they want to stop, but many have trouble doing so because nicotine is an addictive drug. A plant-based medication called cytisinicline may be an effective therapy to help them stop vaping, according to the results of a new clinical trial co-led by an investigator from Massachusetts General Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system. The trial’s findings are published in JAMA Internal Medicine. In the double-blind randomized clinical trial, 160 adults who vaped nicotine ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UPF and the Royal Veterinary College make the first 3D reconstructions of cat hearts to compare them with humans’

Special report highlights LLM cybersecurity threats in radiology

Australia’s oldest prehistoric tree frog hops 22 million years back in time

Sorek awarded $500,000 Gruber Genetics Prize for pioneering discoveries in bacterial immune systems

Ryan Cooke and Max Pettini receive $500,000 Gruber Cosmology Prize for Measuring a Key Value at the Dawn of the Universe

$500,000 Gruber Neuroscience Prize awarded to Edward Chang for groundbreaking discoveries on the neural coding of speech comprehension and production

IU, Regenstrief researchers develop an app to enable the efficient integration of patient medical information into dental practices

Postpartum depression and bonding: Long-term effects on school-age children

Evaluation of in-vitro activity of ceftazidime-avibactam against carbapenem-resistant gram-negative bacteria: A cross-sectional study from Pakistan

Molecular testing of FLT3 mutations in hematolymphoid malignancies in the era of next-generation sequencing

Sugar-coated nanotherapy dramatically improves neuron survival in Alzheimer’s model

Uncovering compounds that tame the heat of chili peppers

Astronomers take a second look at twin star systems

Updated version of the "How Equitable Is It?" tool for assessing equity in scholarly communication models

McGill researchers lead project to reform youth mental health care in Canada

ESMT Berlin research shows private ownership boosts hospital performance

The risk of death or complications from broken heart syndrome was high from 2016 to 2020

Does adapting to a warmer climate have drawbacks?

Team develops digital lab for data- and robot-driven materials science

Got data? Breastfeeding device measures babies’ milk intake in real time

Novel technology enables better understanding of complex biological samples

Autistic people communicate just as effectively as others, study finds

Alaska: Ancient cave sediments provide new climate clues

Adult-onset type 1 diabetes increases risk of cardiovascular disease and death

Onion-like nanoparticles found in aircraft exhaust

Chimpanzees use medicinal leaves to perform first aid

New marine-biodegradable polymer decomposes by 92% in one year, rivals nylon in strength

Manitoba Museum and ROM palaeontologists discover 506-million-year-old predator

Not all orangutan mothers raise their infants the same way

CT scanning helps reveal path from rotten fish to fossil

[Press-News.org] SwRI Workbench for Offline Robotics Development™ (SWORD™) launched at Automate 2024
Southwest Research Institute develops user-friendly ROS programming graphical toolkit for developers