Abstract
While the Higgs phenomenology programme are well underway, direct
signs for new physics beyond the Standard Model remain elusive. In this
talk, I will highlight different avenues to improve our understanding of the
Higgs sector in the future. In particular, I will highlight how machine
learning techniques can lead to robust constraints on new Higgs interactions
in the light of expected uncertainties and competing Higgs coupling
modifications. After discussing the phenomenological prospects of
constraining CP-violating Higgs interactions at the LHC, I will focus on
double Higgs phenomenology as a discovery tool for new physics beyond the
Standard Model.