I am a researcher and artist working at the intersection of plant intelligence, ecological art, and interactive installation. My practice explores how technological mediation can reshape the relationship between humans, plants, and the built environment — moving away from anthropocentric design toward multi-species coexistence.

My research engages with more-than-human theory, restorative environment theory, and research through design as core methodological frames. Across installations and cross-media works, I treat plants not as decoration or instruments, but as agents with their own intentionality — exploring how machines can act as translators rather than tools, and how the slow time of plants can become legible in human-scale environments.

My work spans eco-installations, cross-media interactive art, data visualization installations, and multisensory environments. I am particularly interested in how interactive systems can mediate between non-human agency and human perception, and how the spaces we build can become sites of ecological reciprocity rather than extraction.

I hold an M.A. in Intelligent Design and a B.A. in Digital Media Arts from Central China Normal University, with an exchange semester in Human-Computer Interaction at the State University of New York. I currently work and conduct research at Queensland University of Technology, based in Brisbane, Australia.

Plant-Machine Coexistence More-than-Human Bio Art Built Environment Human-Plant Interaction Interaction Design Mediated Sensory Systems Object-Oriented Design