2022
Mehta, N., Puthillam, A. & Subramanyam, D. (2022). Assessing the impact of COVID-19 on the Indian STEM community – Part 1. India Bioscience.
Azevedo, F., Gjoneska, B., Capraro, V., Etienne, T.W., Lamm, C., Marie, A., Jangard, S., Nitschke, J., de Mello, V.O., Puthillam, A., Riaño, J. Ibanez, A.,Nurse, M. & Zhang, E. (2022). An International Investigation of the Psychology of COVID-19. Behavioural and Social Sciences at Nature Portfolio.
Kapoor, H. & Puthillam, A. (2022). How to ‘solve’ India’s misinformation problem: Answer may lie in building trust, attention. News Nine.
Kapoor, H. & Puthillam, A. (2022). Content and context both matter in tackling India’s misinformation problem. News Nine.
Kapoor, H. & Puthillam, A. (2022). Why tackling the misinformation problem is a complex undertaking in India. News Nine.
2021
Puthillam, A. (2021). As Omicron sounds new COVID alarm, why health is more political than we believe. News Nine.
Puthillam, A. (2021). Psychology of politics: Conventional views of ‘left’ and ‘right’ wing don’t work for India. News Nine.
Puthillam, A. (2021). The COVID-19 pandemic as a social and moral dilemma. Psychology Today.
Puthillam, A. (2021). Understanding what drives conspiracy theories, in the context of Covid-19 in India and political beliefs. FirstPost.
Puthillam, A. (2021). How culture influences how we choose to cooperate. Psychology Today.
2020
Puthillam, A., Karandikar, S., & Kapoor, H. (2020). Who cares about Economic Ideology? Political Psychology.
Puthillam, A. (2020). Opening Up the File Drawer in Cross-Cultural Psychology. Psychology Today.
Sharma, Y., & Puthillam, A. (2020). Psychological Science Needs to Take Off Its Orientalist Lens. Psychology Today.
Puthillam, A. (2020). Psychology’s WEIRD Problem. Psychology Today.
Karandikar, S. & Puthillam, A. (2020).. Why is being a ‘genius’ still so gendered? Women’s Media Centre’s F Bomb
Puthillam, A. (2020).Don’t Speak My Language? We’re Not the Same. Psychology Today
Puthillam, A. (2020).In Memory of Geert Hofstede: A Cross-Cultural Icon. Psychology Today.
2019
Puthillam, A. (2019)How memes gained cultural currency, driving socio-political discourse in the digital era. FirstPost.
Puthillam, A. (2019).Bigg Boss, gossip and survival: The reality show illustrates how talking about others is a powerful social tool. FirstPost.
Puthillam, A. (2019). Still the science of the sophomore? The Psychologist.
Puthillam, A. (2019).The Conundrum of Time. Pragati.
Puthillam, A. (2019). Parks, Recreation, Friendship. Pragati.
Puthillam, A. (2019). The Paradox of Voting. Pragati.
Kapoor, H., Karandikar, S., & Puthillam, A. (2019). Flaws in Academic Publishing Perpetuate a Form of Neo-Colonialism. The Wire.
Puthillam, A. & Thusoo, S. (2019).. Why We Love And Hate Indian Celebrity Weddings. (Video) BuzzFeed India
Puthillam, A. & Thusoo, S. (2019).In 2019, Bollywood must invest in female friendships: More Veeres, no Sonu ke Titu ki Sweety. The Print.
2018
Puthillam, A. (2018). Her name is Ari. Pragati
Puthillam, A. (2018). Talent analytics and personality tests don’t really help pick the right employee. The Print.
Puthillam, A. (2018). How Men Are Like Chimps. Pragati.
Puthillam, A. (2018). Tinder and evolutionary psychology: The science behind what men and women swipe for, and why. FirstPost.
Puthillam, A. & Inamdar, V. (2018).The anatomy of Indian literary prizes: Who writes the award-winning books in India? FirstPost.
Puthillam, A. (2018). Like a Beat Without a Melody. Pragati.
Puthillam, A. & Kanisetti, A. (2018). WhatsApp mobs: It’s time to accept Indians may be predisposed towards xenophobia. The Print.
Puthillam, A. (2018). This is your brain on Democracy. Pragati.
Puthillam, A. (2018).. Are You Left or Right, Stupid? Pragati.
2017
Puthillam, A. (2017). Impostor Phenomenon: where self-doubt rules and success doesn’t heal. Mint on Sunday.
Parekh, A. & Puthillam, A. (2017). Analysis: How Implicit Biases Hamper Women’s Participation in Science. The Wire.
Puthillam, A. (2017).Watch Out For Those Biases. Pragati.
Puthillam, A. (2017). Why We Gossip: The Morality of an Immoral (but Irresistible) Pastime. The Swaddle.
Puthillam, A. (2017). The theory of the stupid class. Mint on Sunday.