In europe we mostly use voltage independent residual current circuit protective devices for domestic use (they have to be I believe to meet EN61008), whatever your country calls it this is what I call an RCD. They are only required to detect current imbalance, whereas according to NEC regs residual current circuit protective devices must detect downstream neutral-earth faults without current flow and live neutral reversal, which as far as my knowedge goes traditionally uses an energised circuit, which leaks current from live to neutral, and a 2nd coil. This is what I (and the country that invented it) call a GFCI. Maybe some newer models can do this passively I don't know, it would only be small number of the GFCIs in use.
Some places in the world may refer to either technology as GFCI or RCD and have different requirements for their devices. So, I regard EN61008 voltage independent residual current circuit protective devices as RCD, and US type devices as GFCI, maybe this causes some confusion, especially in european countries that use the term GFCI. They may or may not be voltage dependent, depending on how their required operation is defined in local regs.
And no I don't have all these regs with me in writing. Download them if you really want to, I don't have the spare time.