Scott assisted her husband with his research. For example, she catalogued and indexed his collections of fossil slides and provided illustrations for his textbooks. However, she also undertook her own independent research in botany and paleobotany. Her most innovative work was applying cinematography to record plant growth. She published her application of time-lapse photography to capture the movement of flowers of
Sparmannia africana, the African linden or African hemp. She had been in communication with
Harry Bolus for information on the natural history of this species. Movement of the stamens had already been recorded by botanists but the petals, sepals and entire flower bud are also capable of comparatively rapid movement. Individual flowers of this species lived much longer in greenhouses in the UK than in its warmer natural habitat in South Africa. In addition to recording flower
circumnutation and opening through drawings, she also applied cinematography. After reviewing available and affordable systems she used a
Kammatograph, a filmless system available from 1900 where photographs are taken on a glass disc and could be projected using a
magic lantern system. Kamm and Co. provided assistance in optimising the Kammatograph for her time-lapse studies. Some of these photographs were included in her scientific publications. She continued to research and publish after the family moved from London to near Basingstoke. ==Personal life==