Monoschock suspension system were pretty often used in Junior formulae till a few years ago.
Basically, they consist of a single damper/spring unit, which is responsible to control vertical movements and a slider that is responsible for roll controlling. Inside this slider, you normally find belleville springs (or cup springs, but they could also simply use normal coil springs if they want to, they use belleville springs only because they are very cheap and allow to change configuration (and hence stiffness) practically in infinite ways with a very low expense and relatively short operation time).
This slider moves horizontally and the springs resist his movements, creating an antiroll effect. The system is pretty "dirty", since while normal antiroll strategies use devices (like a T or a U antiroll bar) that, when you push one wheel up, would bring also the other wheel up, +/- the deformation of the antiroll device itself, this antiroll sliders practically do the opposite: if you remove the springs inside and you push one wheel up, the other wheel goes down, because when the slider slides inside its case, it brings the pushrod rodends with it.
Moreover, you don't really have a way to control roll damping at the front, beside the friction inside this slider.
http://www.race-cars.com/carsold/other/ ... 6952pe.htm
In any case, the first thing to understand would be if your simulation software has really modeled such a system or simply use a strategy where a single spring is used to control vertical movements (like in a third element with a t antiroll bar) and a "normal" antiroll bar (T or U) is used to control roll.
There were cars using such a scheme also in the "real world" like the old F.BMW.