Lai-Tze Fan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lai-Tze Fan is a Canadian digital storytelling and media theory critic, with a focus on artificial intelligence and technological designs.[1][2] She holds the Canada Research Chair in Technology and Social Change, endowed by the Government of Canada.[3]

Lai-Tze Fan graduated with a BA and a PhD in Communication & Culture, focused on Media & Culture, Technology in Practice, and Politics & Policy from York University in Toronto.[4] During this time, she was a research assistant at the Modern Literature and Culture Research Centre at the Toronto Metropolitan University.[5] Her PhD dissertation, Pre | Digital Liminalities: A Hermeneutics of the Intermedial and Materiality in the Print Intermedial Novel, focused on the interconnected roles of media networks (for example novels, film, and computers) in persuasive storytelling.[6] Her MA is from Wilfrid Laurier University.[4] From 2016 – 2017, she was a Postdoctoral Fellow at Concordia University in Montréal, housed in the Department of English and the Milieux Institute for Arts, Culture, and Technology.[7]
Career
In 2017, Fan served as Assistant Professor of Digital Media/Culture in the Department of Cultural Studies at Lingnan University, Hong Kong.[6]
Currently, at the University of Waterloo, Canada, Fan is an Associate Professor in Sociology and Legal Studies, and English Language and Literature.[4] As a Canada Research Chair, she directs the interdisciplinary U&AI Lab at Waterloo. At the University of Bergen, Norway, Fan is also a part-time associate professor at the Center for Digital Narrative.[8][9]
Fan serves as the Co-Director of Waterloo's TRuST scholarly network, targeting misinformation and public trust in science, technology, and health.[10] Her Co-Director is Nobel Laureate Donna Strickland.[8]
Fan was the Principal Investigator in the research project, “Using Interactive Digital Storytelling to Represent Transformative Quantum Technologies in Augmented/Extended Reality Environments” from 2021 to 2023, funded by the Tri-Council “Canada First” Research Excellence Fund.[11] She is the Principal Investigator of the 2025 to 2030 project "Interdisciplinary Approaches toward Responsible Facial Recognition AI: Developing Technical, Ethical, and Regulatory Recommendations for Policymaking in Canada," funded by the Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, using novel methods in AI diplomacy to navigate facial recognition governance and policy.[12]
Fan is one of four authors for the electronic literature work, Dim Sum, with artists from MIT and NYU Shanghai.[13] She is also the co-author of the computationally generated poem Dial with Nick Montfort.[14] She was a 2020 Fellow of the Electronic Literature Organization and has been on the Board of Directors since 2021.[4][1][8][15]
Fan is an editor for the open-access journal Electronic Book Review and the multimodal litearry journal The Digital Review. She is co-editor of the collection Post-Digital: Dialogues and Debates (Bloomsbury 2020). She is also a board member of the Electronic Literature Organization.[15]