Her research interests include Indigenous practices and performances of music and dance in urban areas throughout the Arctic.
[7] She has performed as a violinist at the Inuit Artist's World Showcase in Inukjuak, Canada, and at the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C. in their Classical Native Series.
Senungetuk also performed at the National Gallery of Art and the American Museum of Natural History as first violinist with The Coast Orchestra.
[5] Trained as a classical violinist, Senungetuk has stated that her goal for her music and dance practice is to challenge “listeners to rethink static images of Indigeneity through expressive media that are at once forward-looking and of the present and that embrace the past”.
[11][9] Senungetuk's written works include an Oxford Bibliography Online article Indigenous Musics of the Arctic (2017), her dissertation Creating a Native Space in the City: An Inupiaq Community in Song and Dance (2017), and the prologue for the book Music and Modernity Among First Peoples of North America (Wesleyan University Press, 2019).