The development of technologies for music and movement analysis continuously offer opportunities for new ethnomusicological research. Our institute benefits from these opportunities in many of its research projects, engaging with technologies such as computer-generated audio examples in the project Virtual Gamelan Graz, motion-capture in the project Tango-Danceability of Music in European Perspective, signal processing in the research of Babak Nizkat and Rafael Caro, and computationally extracted statistics in the work of Sarah Weiss and Rafael Caro. Computational aided research in our institute is based on different data types, including digital audio recordings (of Javanese karawitan, Iranian classical and regional music, tango argentino, Chinese jingju, etc.), motion data (tango argentino) and machine readable music scores (Javanese balungan and Chinese jingju).  Different corpora are being created with the aim of performing data driven research. In the realm of music technology, our institute maintains collaborations with international research groups, such as the Music Technology Group from Universitat Pompeu Fabra (Musical Bridges project). The founding of the ICTM Study Group on Sound, Movement, and the Sciences was initiated by Institute members (2019), with Kendra Stepputat being the current Study Group Chair, Rafael Caro Study Group Secretary.