Photoresponsive supramolecular polymers are well-organized assemblies containing photosensitive molecules as (co-)monomers bound together by highly oriented and reversible non-covalent interactions. They have attracted increasing interest in smart materials and systems with precisely controllable functions, such as light-driven soft actuators, photoresponsive fluorescent anti-counterfeiting, and light-triggered electronic devices. In this thesis, we studied the mechanism of photoinduced supramolecular polymerization, the difference in the assembly mechanism of supramolecular polymers in organic solvent and water, as well as molecular motor-based aggregates that show multiple stimuli response or multistate chirality and emission. Furthermore...