number associated with a particular type of food that indicates the food's effect on a person's blood glucose level
via PubMed
Graph depicting blood sugar change during a day with three meals. The glycemic (glycaemic) index (GI; /ɡlaɪˈsiːmɪk/) is a number from 0 to 100 assigned to a food, with pure glucose arbitrarily given the value of 100, which represents the relative rise in the blood glucose level two hours after consuming that food. The GI of a specific food depends primarily on the type of carbohydrate it contains, but is also affected by the amount of entrapment of the carbohydrate molecules within the food, the fat, protein content of the food, the moisture and fiber content, the amount of organic acids (or their salts) (e.g., citric or acetic acid), and the method of cooking. GI tables, which list many types of foods and their GIs, are available. A food is considered to have a low GI if it is 55 or less; high GI if 70 or more; and mid-range GI if 56 to 69.
The term was introduced in 1981 by David J. Jenkins and co-workers and was created to compare the relative effects of different foods on postprandial glucose levels. It is useful for quantifying the relative rapidity with which the body breaks down carbohydrates. It takes into account only the available carbohydrate (total carbohydrate minus fiber) in a food. Glycemic index does not predict an individual's glycemic response to a food, but can be used as a tool to assess the insulin response burden of a food, averaged across a studied population. Individual responses vary greatly.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).