My current research and teaching mainly focus on the relation between Humans and Artificial Intelligence. Artificial Intelligence (AI) plays an important part in daily life supporting and guiding the many decisions we take, ranging from our preferred web-series to medical diagnoses. Whereas we intensively interact with AI applications, the cooperation between humans and AI is poorly understood. At the same time, there is frequent speculation that AI makes us dumb and forms a potential threat to our socio-economic well-being, for instance, by replacing labor or limiting our free-will. New AI solutions are often met with reluctance by target users in domains, such as health, finance, education,… A scientific understanding of the impact of AI on social and cognitive well-being of humans is thus imperative to move beyond speculation and offer real solutions that enhance the relation between humans and AI. My research program focusses on the Social Cognition of Human-AI interaction, such as trust and intentionality. I coordinate the GoalLab en de Special Interest Group Social and Cognitive Aspects of AI within the UU Focus Area on Human-Centered AI.