Most scientifically beautiful woman...
University of St Andrews perception laboratory in the School of Psychology's, Carmen Lefèvre, implied that beauty has a major connection to symmetry, stating, "Florence has all the classic signs of beauty." Further more, "Symmetry appears to be a very important cue to attractiveness."
Research found that people are more (unconsciously) attracted to symmetry because it's an indication of strong genes, therefore implying better odds of mating and overall reproduction.
According to Daily Mail, the most attractive women have pupils just half the width of her face from ear to ear, Colgate almost foots the bill by scoring a 44 percent ratio. Impressive!
Carmen Lefèvre went on to say, Colgate is a display of "classic signs of beauty." What does that mean? Large eyes, high cheek bones, and supple lips.
Science also says the most attractive woman's distance between her eyes and mouth is a little over a third of the measurement between her hair line and chin. Colgate's ratio is 32.8 percent.
Apparently, this "proportional beauty theory" backdates to when Da Vinci applied visionary thinking and mathematical genius to describing the perfect face over half a millennium ago.