Yes, there is confusion, because F# has morphed from OCaml to .Net over the years. Basically, the naming conventions are a "breaking change" - old code is inconsistent with new code (but will still compile).
However, the May 2009 CTP has settled the issue.
The Release Notes say...
Standard Library Naming Conventions
The naming conventions adopted for the F# library are as follows:
o All .NET and F# OO code uses PascalCase according to existing .NET guidelines
o The F# functional programming operators such as List.map are for use in F# internal implementation code. This kind of code uses camelCase for operator names
o Underscores should not be used except for the Module.to_type and Module.of_type pattern.
So, your question...
Class.MyFunctionName or Module.my_function_name
The answer is
Class.MyFunctionName and Module.MyFunctionName
(applying rule 1 above).
There is still some confusion by comparision with the F# programming operators (eg. List.averageBy), but production F# code should use CamelCase, and thus look like everyone else's .Net code. If in doubt, check the sample code for the CTP.
(I personally like_the_caml_style, but I'll have to GetOverThat)