I once read about a blind guy who got his eyesight - thanks to a surgery - after a life-long blindness of about 30 years. He did see, but couldn't process visual information like a normal person (eg. he would only recognize a human face to be a human face after the person began talking)
I wonder whether that changes over time. After all, people with eyesight have to learn that as well, I guess. They just do it at the beginning of their life.
Yes they learn, but the opportunity might be a one off for all we know.
Not the same, but similar:
According to the Nobel Prize-winning research from David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel in the 1960s, the brain may only have a short window of opportunity in which to develop binocular vision, in which both eyes are used together. Their studies in cats, and many other studies since, suggest that if the developing brain isn’t exposed to overlapping images from the two eyes, it will never form the connections it needs to process a three dimensional scene